Read Comeback Online

Authors: Vicki Grant

Tags: #JUV000000, #Fiction, #Fathers and Daughters, #Fraud, #Rumors, #Brothers and Sisters, #Airplane Accidents, #Dysfunctional Families, #Divorce, #Family Problems, #Suspense Fiction; Canadian, #Runaways, #Parent and Child, #Automobile Travel, #High Interest-Low Vocabulary Books, #Suspense Stories; Canadian, #Missing Persons, #Teenage Fiction; Canadian, #Children of Divorced Parents, #Seventeen-Year-Old Girls, #Teenage Girls

Comeback (5 page)

I don't know what I expect—but anything would have been better than what he does.

He hesitates.

“Colin?” I'm so shocked I can barely make the word come out.

He takes three steps toward me and stops, just out of arm's length.

He opens his mouth to say something, but he doesn't have to.

I know immediately that he's heard the stories. That he's believed them. That he's chosen them over me.

I stand there with my mouth open, my eyes desperately scanning the room for another explanation. That's when I see Helena. I forgot she's in this class. I feel a little twitter of hope—but she picks up her pen and starts writing in her notebook.

She can't even look at me.

I turn and race down the hall. A door opens, and Mr. Goldfarb says, “No running in the…” He sees it's me and slips back into his classroom.

He knows too.

Everybody knows.

I keep running until I get to the LeSabre.

The whole way home, all I can think about is Colin. I can't believe he'd do this to me—do this to Dad! I feel so betrayed and hurt and angry—but then it's as if some acid trickles into my brain. I see the words
multimillion-dollar scam
, and just for a second I imagine the MacPhersons losing everything they own because of something my father did.

I feel like I'm in a horror movie and there's some maniac waiting for me behind every door.

I just want to get home—whatever that means. I push my foot to the floor and gun it.

I haven't even turned onto our street, and already I see at least four media vans camped outside our house. I can't face them. I take a hard turn to the left and park the next street over. I sit there stunned for at least an hour, too scared to move. Kids are going to be coming home from school soon. They're going to look at the car. They'll look at me. I get out and sneak home the back way, through a neighbor's yard. The neighbor sees me from her dining room window and waves.

I wave back. She obviously doesn't believe the stories.

Or she hasn't heard them yet.

Mom is sitting with Elliot at the kitchen table while he eats his after-school snack. She stands up when I walk in the door. It's weirdly formal. It's scary.

She says, “Ria, I'm glad you're back,” but she doesn't look glad at all.

“There's something I need to talk to you and Elliot about.” She sits down and pats the chair so that I'll sit down too.

I don't like the sound of this. She's going to say something about Dad. I can tell. I want to yell at her—I
would
yell at her—but Elliot is here, looking so cute and innocent and almost happy, eating his oatmeal cookie.

I hold my purse in my lap as if I'm ready to bolt at any moment.

“You may have noticed the vans outside,” she says.

“Yes!” shouts Elliot. This is a major event for him. “
Live at Five!
Just like on tv. I can hardly wait to tell my teacher!”

Mom reaches out and ruffles his hair. “Hmm. Honey, I don't know if that's such a good idea.”

That confuses Elliot. His teacher loves
Live at Five!

“Why?” he says.

Mom ignores him. He holds his cookie so tightly, a big piece breaks off, and he doesn't even pick it up.

Mom's lips smile. “In many ways, your father was a wonderful man… He certainly loved you both very, very much.”

I know it's coming.

“But there are some things about him you should probably know.” She clears her throat. “He was a stockbroker. That means that people gave him their money to invest for them.”

Elliot's eyes are huge. He's trying really hard to be good, to understand.

“What does ‘invest' mean?”

She explains it to him. I know I only have a minute. She'll tell him what “invest” means, and then she'll tell him what “multimillion-dollar scam” means.

She's going to tell Elliot our father is a criminal. I know she is. That's what she wants. She'll turn his own son against him. There will be no one but me to believe Dad anymore.

“Daddy buys companies for people?” Elliot says. “I don't get it.”

Mom looks away, trying to come up with another way to explain the stock market to a five-year-old.

“Excuse me,” I say. “I know this is important—but could we talk about it later? Colin wants to take Elliot and me rock climbing at the Great Wall this afternoon.”

Elliot starts bouncing up and down in his seat. “Yeah! Yeah! We're going to the climbing wall!”

Mom doesn't know what to do. I can see that. Her little talk isn't going as well as she planned, and there's no way Elliot will be in any state to listen now.

She sighs. She rubs both hands over her elbows and says, “When will you be back?”

“He wanted to take us out for burgers too”—more squeals of delight from Elliot—“so I doubt we'll be home before eight, eight thirty.”

Mom knows when she's beat.

“Okay, Elliot. But you've got to take your medicine before you can go.”

Normally, Elliot hates using his asthma puffer, but this time he practically swallows it. I don't waste any time stuffing him into his shoes and sweater. We're out the door in three minutes.

Elliot thinks we're scrambling over the back fence because we're practicing for the climbing wall.

Chapter Twelve

I'm not scared anymore.

No. That's wrong. I
am
scared, but I barely notice it now. It's like a noise that bothers you for a while, but then you get used to it and almost don't hear it anymore.

Elliot's strapped in the front seat of the LeSabre, babbling away as if we're going to a birthday party. I realize that sooner or later I'm going to have to tell him what's up.

I hear the sound of scared again.

We're heading out of town. We pass the turnoff to Colin's street.

“Hey!” Elliot goes. “Aren't we picking Colin up?”

“Ah, no, not right now.” He turns and looks at me with one eye closed. It's his angry pirate face.

“Why not?”

“Sorry, Elliot. Can't talk now. Got to figure out where I'm going.”

That much at least is true. Where
am
I going?

I don't know. I've just got to get out of here.

I've got to go someplace where nobody knows us. Somewhere we can ride this thing out.

I'll get a job. I'll put Elliot in school. We'll be okay—better than we are here, that's for sure. I'll look after him. I'll bring him up to be just like Dad—good and smart and funny and kind.

Some day when this mess is cleared up, the two of us will sue all the people who said bad things about our father. Then we'll be rich again. We'll have the last laugh.

I press too hard on the gas. I don't mean to. All of a sudden, I'm excited.

Dad always said, “Crisis is just another word for opportunity.”

I take the ramp onto the highway and break out into a smile.

I can do this.

I wish I knew how to put the top down. I have this urge to just gun it, feel the wind in my hair. It seems like the appropriate thing to do. This should be a celebration, not some sneaky little escape. We have nothing to be ashamed of.

We'll get our own little apartment, Elliot and I. I'll decorate it. I'll learn to cook. I'll throw him a big birthday party when he turns six and invite all his new friends.

“Ria. We're going the wrong way to the Great Wall.” Elliot's neck is stretched out so he can see over the dashboard.

I consider saying, “No, we aren't,” and stringing him along for a while, but I don't. I think of all those lies about Dad and how much they hurt, and I realize I've got to tell the truth. I promise myself that I'll always tell Elliot the truth.

“You're right, sweetie. This isn't the way to the Great Wall. We're actually going somewhere else.”

Elliot's eyes are wide open, and his bottom lip is rolled down. “Where?” he says in a tiny little voice.

“On an adventure!” I sound like I'm hosting a preschool program. “Mommy can't look after us anymore, so we're going to get a new home somewhere else…” I want him to throw his hands up in the air and go “Yeah!” like he did before, but he doesn't. He looks at me as if I'm the worst liar ever. Then he bursts into tears.

“I don't like adventures! I want Mommy!” He kicks the dashboard and throws his head back and forth as if someone is slapping his face.

I feel like I pulled the wrong stick out of the Jenga tower. All my plans crash to the ground. I'm going “Shh! Shh! Elliot. Calm down!” but I'm having trouble even calming myself down.

Why did I think this was going to be easy?

There's an exit coming up. I could turn around there and be home by six. I could turn around, take Elliot to the Great Wall and be home by eight.

I put on the blinker—but I drive right past the exit.

I can't go home to Mom and the lies and the fact that Colin isn't there anymore.

Elliot is howling and thrashing away. I worry his shoes are going to leave scuff marks on the white leather upholstery.

I do my best to blank him out and lean into the windshield. I tell myself to keep going. I'll figure something out.

Elliot's crying eventually winds down into a wheezy sort of whimpering. He stops asking me where we're going. The sky starts getting dark, and my hands go numb from clenching the steering wheel.

I notice the gas is almost on empty. I pull off at the next exit and look for a service station. The whole time, my head is frantically making new calculations. How far can we get before Mom sounds the alarm? How far can we get on a tank of gas? How far can we get before Elliot melts down?

I pull up to the pump and get out my wallet. It sounds stupid, but this is the first time I realize I actually have to find a way to pay for everything.

Mom cut up my credit card. I've got $18 in bills, maybe a couple bucks more in change. I have a debit card, but I doubt there's more than $35 in my account.

I get a little electric shock of panic, but then I think,
No. Something will
come up. We'll be okay.
That was always Dad's attitude.

I start filling the tank. I can't believe how little time it takes to hit $30. I tell Elliot not to move, and I go into the station to pay. The girl at the counter swipes my card. I key in my pin and hold my breath. It goes through. That's a good sign.

I get out some change and buy a Coke and a bag of chips for Elliot. I immediately feel guilty. Mom would never let him eat like that.

At least the junk food makes Elliot happy for a while. I turn the radio on to the corniest station I can find. For an hour or so, we cruise along the highway with the music blasting. If I could just forget all the other stuff, it would almost seem like we're on an adventure.

I'm starting to pass signs for places I've only ever heard of on the weather report. I switch off the radio when the eight o'clock news comes on. It dawns on me I won't always be able to just turn things off. Someday, Elliot will hear the stories. I'll have to be ready.

The sky is black now—blacker than it ever gets in the city. I imagine our house all lit up by the television lights. Mom is no doubt starting to listen for the sound of Elliot and me coming up the stairs.

How long before she gets worried? How long before she calls? I reach into my purse and turn off my cell. I don't want Elliot asking why I'm not answering my phone.

“I need to pee, Ria.”

I don't want to stop yet. I want to get as far away as I can.

“Can you wait?” I say.

He doesn't have to answer. I can tell by the way he's fidgeting that I've got to find a washroom fast.

What if he doesn't make it? What if he wets his pants? I should have packed him a change of clothes.

I take the next exit and, thankfully, there's a service station just a minute down the road. I look at the gas gauge. We're practically on empty again. This car is going to bankrupt me.

Elliot runs into the washroom, holding his crotch.

A guy in his twenties watches him run in and laughs. “Been there, done that,” he says. He notices the LeSabre. “Nice car.”

I nod. I'm too worried about money to answer. We have to eat, find a place to sleep… “How does it drive?”

“Good,” I say and shrug. I'm trying to brush him off, but then suddenly I get an idea. “Want to give it a spin?”

He looks at me like,
Are you kidding?
and says, “Yeah!”

“Okay,” I say. “Twenty bucks for twenty minutes.”

I can see the guy's surprised that I'd actually charge him, but it doesn't stop him.

“Sure.” He hands me a twenty. “And here, take my birth certificate too. Don't want you worrying about me taking off on you.”

Elliot comes out of the washroom just in time to see the guy get in our car. He doesn't ask why. I think he's scared of answers now.

I hold his hand and watch the car pull out onto the road. There's a bunch of people standing in front of the gas station, and they all watch too. You sure can't hide in a 1962 LeSabre.

Elliot and I have been sitting on the curb waiting for about ten minutes when a bus pulls up. The people in front of the station all pile on. It dawns on me that no one pays much attention to a bus.

I hear a little
ding
in my brain.

“C'mon, Elliot!” I say. “Want to go for a ride?”

The sign on the bus says
Cypress-
Riverview
. The driver is standing outside, having a smoke, while the passengers get settled in their seats.

I've got $20 in my hand from the guy. Roughly eighteen more in my wallet. Who knows how much—if anything—in my account. I'll need to save some for food. That means I could spend about $30 on bus tickets.

“Excuse me,” I say. “How much does it cost to go to”—I check the window for the name again—“Cypress?”

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