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The first time I ever left momma was in high school. It happened during summer break between my junior and senior year, on a Saturday. I was riding in my little old red Oldsmobile with my dad. He and I went to a bookstore close to downtown Dallas because there weren’t (and still aren’t) any good bookstores in the whole city of Thornton. We were driving back home, me at the wheel and dad in the passenger seat, when I got a call from my sister Isabella. She said momma was caught having an affair with Vincent, our stepdad. I was pissed. I rushed on home in my little Oldsmobile and expected to say a whole lot to momma but when I got home she and Vincent were locked in their bedroom and it was then that I realized I couldn’t stomach the thought of staying in the same house as momma any longer. With dad waiting outside in the Oldsmobile I went into the bedroom my older brother Teddy made for me from the garage. I got out my big blue suitcase—the one I got for when I went to go visit Teddy when he was stationed in Alaska—and I started throwing in all of my clothes. Then Bella walked into my room and asked what I was doin’ and I just started crying. Tears pouring all down my face, I started cursing and yelling. I said momma was a stupid bitch and Bella knew I wouldn’t have said that if momma hadn’t been caught having an affair before, when she divorced from my dad. I was seven then. Bella was seventeen and Teddy was around twenty.
I got so mad that I got into a sort of fighting stance and aimed to punch a hole in the wall but Bella reached out and hugged me before I could make the motion. She stayed hugging me for a few seconds and she told me how sorry she was for me. Then she started to sob too, I could hear her voice break down. I eventually let go of her and told her I was gonna stay with dad and started packing more of my clothes into the suitcase. Then momma walked into my room I looked at her and called her a stupid dumb bitch but she just stood there and didn’t say nothin’ back. She looked so pitiful. That was the first time I ever cursed in front of momma, and that was the only time I ever cursed at momma. Then I told them both to leave and they left. I was still pissed. After I got all of my clothes into the suitcase there wasn’t very much room for all my books, so I grabbed only my favorites, The Stranger and The Grapes of Wrath, and reckoned that I had to sneak back into the house at some other time and carefully carry out the rest of my bookshelf. I grabbed the suitcase and made my way out and met dad outside. I put the suitcase into the trunk and drove to dad’s house which is in Elam, the next town over. That whole ride we were silent.
By the next weekend, Vincent had moved out of the house and momma and Bella were supposed to be out of town with one of our aunts. It was Sunday night and I snuck into the house to get my books and the bookshelf too since I didn’t have a place at dad’s house to store ‘em all. I had so many books that I had to make several trips from my room to the Oldsmobile to fetch ‘em all. On my third trip I found an old cardboard box, like the ones they put microwaves in, and managed to fit in a lot of my smaller paperbacks in there but it was hella heavy so I was struggling to lift it up and out of the house. After making my way through the front door I saw Judith there standing there in the dark on the sidewalk between the car and I. Damn, how do I tell you about Judy?
Judy was my neighbor then. She lived next door to me on Longshadow Lane and we both went to Thornton High School but we didn’t know we lived next to each other until Sam (you remember when I told you about Sam? He’s the one that’s got a little boy but still acts as dumb as he was when he was in high school) came over to my house one day and asked me if I knew Judy. Sam had known her because she was friends with his girlfriend. I told him I didn’t know her so he dragged me on over next door and introduced me to her. After that day she and I would sometimes go get something to eat after school (since there was a McDonald’s behind our houses) and sometimes she’d come over to my house and we’d watch a movie together. She always managed to find a way into the house—she was just sorta there all the time. But that Sunday night I hadn’t told Judy yet what happened between momma and Vincent and I hadn’t told her why I was moving in with my dad. She just saw me there with a big old cardboard box in my hands and helped me carry it to the Oldsmobile. She also helped with the big black wooden bookshelf, too, even though she was thinner than I was at the time. While we were carrying it to the car she asked me what was goin’ on and I started to tear up again. I didn’t tell her exactly what happened but she stopped asking questions and we just kept on carrying the shelf over into the back of the Oldsmobile.
‘Cause I was angry at momma, I didn’t feel too badly about leaving her. Momma had Bella so I didn’t feel like I was responsible for taking care of her after Vincent left. But Judy’s a whole different story. Judy sorta needed me. She felt safer at my house than she did at hers for reasons I really can’t tell you about yet. I felt horrible for leaving Judy and for a long time I forced myself to forget about her and for a couple years I did forget about her. That was the last time I saw her for a long time, that Sunday night she helped me with the books and all. I started to drive off to Elam and she stood there alone on the dark sidewalk. In my rearview mirror I could see her slim little figure fade quickly into the night.
Well, that all happened about two years before I left for Faraday. I only stayed with dad for senior year of high school. It wasn’t all that great, considering he worked two jobs and was never home. Bella left momma and moved on out to a trailer park in Elam when she got a man and started expecting kids. Although momma asked for forgiveness for what she did and I said I forgave her, I still hated what she’d done. But I couldn’t stand the thought of momma living out by herself so, when I graduated from Thornton High, I moved in back with her. She had a new place in Clayburg, about twenty minutes from Thornton and twenty-five from Elam. I lived with momma for about a year, working in Dallas and all. But then I decided I to send in my application to Faraday University. I didn’t tell momma about it, though. I had kept it a secret from her until I got a letter back from Faraday—it was on my birthday. Probably the best gift I ever got. They said I was accepted and ready to enroll for the next fall.
But about a month before I left, momma broke her arm. She had got this German Shepard pup, you see, from her brother – Luna’s her name. One morning momma was letting Luna out into the backyard so she could feed her but she slipped on a little rug she had on the hardwood floor for Luna to sleep on. Momma fell backward and threw her left arm behind her so she could try and break her fall and that’s how she broke it. I felt like hell for having to leave momma again, especially with a broken arm. But I had to leave again. Except that time it wasn’t not out of anger. It felt sorta like having to leave Judy all over again.
A week before I left, we bought a 36-pack of water bottles form Walmart. Momma had a hard time popping open the little plastic bottle caps on account of her broken arm so she had to use her teeth sometimes to get ‘em open. So, on my last night at the house before I left for Faraday, I popped opened every single one of caps on the bottles, twisted them back on lightly, and left them on the kitchen counter so she wouldn’t have a hard time getting ‘em open later. The next morning I hopped into the little red Oldsmobile with my books and all and started my three-hour trip.
There were only three bottles left when I came back home for the funeral.
