Return to Me (21 page)

Read Return to Me Online

Authors: Justina Chen

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Marriage & Divorce, #Girls & Women, #Juvenile Fiction / Girls - Women, #Juvenile Fiction / Family - Marriage & Divorce, #Juvenile Fiction / Family / General

BOOK: Return to Me
13.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Yes
, I heard the ringing of rightness.
Yes.

When I opened my eyes, Mom was holding out a single flower to me.

“Where did you get this?” I asked.

She gestured to the ground below, where a pink-tinged shrub had sprung improbably from black death. Across from the low bush was a spindly tree, taller than me. I spun around, no longer noticing the consuming force of the volcanic eruption but instead seeing the hardscrabble life that had eked its way back. This was
no different from the High Line park in Manhattan, which could only have been rebirthed into an urban oasis because the railway had first been abandoned. No different from Mom, whose face was angled toward the sunlight, her natural curls bouncing freely around her shoulders. No different from me, freeing myself from a mantle of expectations I no longer wanted to wear.

All around me, the burned floor was sprinkled here and there with a flowering of glorious red.

Chapter Twenty-Four

I
mmediately after dinner, Mom apologized that even though it was only seven, she needed to sleep, blaming her exhaustion on jet lag. Her excuse was only partially right. It wasn’t just our bodies that were jet-lagged. So were our emotions. Coming to terms with Dad’s betrayal and all the aftershocks of new hurts and the reappraised past had sapped me more than I cared to admit. What toll did that take on my mother? I accompanied Mom to the Nookery, our pace slow in the dimming light.

“Dad totally screwed up, Mom. You deserve better than this,” I said softly. Instead of feeling like a traitor for admitting out loud that Dad had messed up and let our entire family down, I felt… unburdened. And relieved.

Unexpectedly, Mom began to cry as if her illusions were shattering all over again, shoulders heaving with sobs I hadn’t heard since her appointment with the gynecologist.

“Mom, Mom!” Panicking, I fluttered around her, not knowing what to say to assuage her sorrow. “I’m sorry! I shouldn’t have said anything.”

Even in her distraught state, Mom must have sensed that she was frightening me, because she shook her head. “No,” she said, drawing in a shaky breath, “I’m okay. Better than okay, Babycakes.”

That nickname—the one I heard Grandma use with her, the one I had snapped at Mom never to call me ever again in front of my friends when I was in sixth grade—was healing balm.

As though she had foreseen this moment, Grandma caught up to us, toting a basket loaded with a flask of Kahlúa, a Thermos of coffee, and three tiny cups. She told me, “It’s time for a girl talk.”

Designed for one, the Nookery was snug for two and crowded for three. Even so, we squeezed inside, all three of us on the window seat.

“Girls,” Grandma said without any preamble, “I’ve been wanting to tell you something for a long time. You both have spent practically half your lives—yes, you have—denying your intuition. Let me tell you something. Your sixth sense is a God-given gift.” She held up her hand to stave off Mom’s protest. “Let me finish. It is no different from your gift in creating gardens.” Then she turned to me. “Or yours to design buildings.” Straightening her back and placing her hands on our knees, Grandma said, “Denying your intuition is no different from squandering those gifts. So when people talk about callings, you should know that you’ve been twice blessed. It will be a shame, a darn shame,
not just for you but for everybody around you, if you don’t use your gifts, all of your gifts, to their full potential.”

“Thom said—” Mom began.

“I can guess what Thom said!” Grandma smoothed back her hair to calm herself. Her eyes were button-hard as she considered us. “There are plenty of CEOs who talk about trusting their guts. What’s that if not sixth sense? In any case, what matters most is you being authentically yourself. And if you cut a part of yourself off—especially to please someone else—do you think that you’re really being celebrated for who you are? Do you really think you’re being truly and completely loved?”

My mind wandered to Jackson as I pondered what Grandma was telling us. I had never trusted him to accept all the parts of me when I saw firsthand how Dad mocked Mom’s inklings and scorned her forebodings. Had I been wrong about Jackson? After all, not once had he ever asked me to be less than I was. But then I thought of Ginny. Her reaction to my premonition about her dad’s death had all but censored my visions.

“How do you know that our visions aren’t… I don’t know, wrong?” I asked quietly.

“Because we help people,” Grandma answered simply. “How could that impulse come from anything but goodness?”

I thought of Mom and her healing garden for Ginny’s dad and the salad bowl container gardens that she gave as gifts. And I thought of my few visions, even the prophetic one about Ginny’s dad. After my revelation, she had flounced to her mom in hysterics, demanding to leave. Didn’t that give her time with her father that would have been otherwise spent on Lewis, away
from him before his unexpected death a few days later? For the first time, I found peace over that event.

“I’ll put it in another way,” Grandma said, as she took my hand and my mother’s and squeezed gently. “When you’re in tune with your inner voice, do you feel completely aligned: head, heart, and soul?”

I nodded. It was true. When I denied my visions, that’s when I felt nauseous. Mom murmured, “Yes.”

“The women in our family have always been helpers. I don’t mean that you have to save the world. But you do have to listen to your intuition. That is our true calling. I believe it,” said Grandma, quiet in her conviction. Silent now, she poured the Kahlúa and coffee in cups for herself and Mom, just coffee in mine. Lifting hers, she said, “
Salud
.”

Through unspoken understanding, Grandma and I left Mom to rest after we finished those drinks. We found ourselves drawn back to Grandpa’s home, his front door propped open with a coconut. Through the screen door, I saw him puttering in the kitchen, filling the next morning’s breakfast baskets on the countertop. I counted one for each of us.

“Do you think everybody will want macadamia-and-banana pancakes tomorrow morning?” he asked uncertainly when we ventured into his kitchen.

“Who wouldn’t?” I answered.

Before I could offer to help, Grandma did so, grabbing the Ziploc bag crammed with fat macadamia nuts from the refrigerator. Without a word, in perfect synchronicity, they assembled the other ingredients. Feeling left out, I knew I should leave
them alone. But where should I go? Even though there was light left in the waning day, I didn’t want to bike any more than I wanted to drive down to admire the lava glow in the dark.

Grandpa blurted, “You know, there’s a treehouse here….”

“A treehouse? Really?” I asked, startled. “That wasn’t part of our tour.”

Grandpa shrugged. “I wanted you to find it on your own….”

“But don’t you need help?”

“No,” said Grandma quickly, too quickly.

When she wasn’t looking, I winked at Grandpa. With a grin, he handed me a flashlight.

“Where is it?” I asked. But then I shook my head because I knew where Peter had sited the treehouse, where I would have hidden a secret sanctuary on these lush grounds. Even without any guidance or direction, my gut knew the way.

There were no twinkle lights, no tiki torches, no wooden signs to announce the existence of the nondescript path beyond the yoga hut, just a discreet archway of boughs. I ducked, even though I didn’t need to. The arch was the perfect portal for someone my size.

After winding around primordial ferns, the path curled to a stout tree before connecting to a spiral staircase made of wood. Those stairs opened to a treehouse, ten feet off the ground, high enough to gain perspective on my life.

On the bookshelf, tea lights were piled inside a palm-size
bird’s nest. Three thick glass votives, each the color of sea grass, anchored a column of hand-stitched journals that were crafted from rough banana paper. A bouquet of multicolored pens filled a tiny canister painted with a path that led not to a watery rainbow or a buried treasure but to a heart wide open. Above that heart, one word:
Follow
.

And there, lining the window ledges, were the tiny fairy houses I had crafted with Grandpa when I was a little girl. Offerings I had placed around his houseboat because I truly believed that the fairies themselves would call back Grandma Stesha, tell her we missed her. He had kept them all. I had never known.

The treehouse rocked gently in the wind, soothing as a cradle. Now I cupped my favorite fairy house delicately in my hand, studying its steeply pitched roofline punctuated with a hawk’s tail feather that I had found floating past Grandpa’s houseboat.

I followed my instinct now and lit three candles, marking this as sacred time with myself. What better way to begin than with a fresh journal? I selected a green one. Then I settled on an orange floor pillow, the fairy house before me.

It had been so long since I had consulted my heart about anything, relying as I did on my head. I was at a crossroads with college and Jackson, and it was time to make some decisions that felt right both in my mind and in my soul. Until I figured out what it was that I truly wanted, I didn’t want to talk to Jackson. He deserved better than me jerking him around with texts that suggested I was getting back together with him. He deserved a girl who knew with a thousand percent certainty that she wanted to be with him, only him. I wasn’t there yet.

By the time the sky had dimmed to indigo, my sketches and flowcharts and ruminations filled fifteen pages, and I had run out of answers to the tough questions I had posed to myself. One thing I knew for certain: I didn’t want to go back to Seattle and apply to UW for next fall solely because a boy was there. That decision—that life change—had to make sense for me, too.

So I composed a final text to Jackson for the time being:
I can’t do this right now. Life is too chaotic. I’ll be in touch when I’m ready and sure of myself again…. Please understand.
Before I lost my resolve, before I could edit and rewrite the message a hundred times, I hit Send.

Later, much later, when the tea lights had burned out and I rested my fairy house back on the bookshelf, I heard Grandma Stesha’s incredulous voice: “You built this all on your own?”

Leaning out the window, I could see the merged shadows of my grandparents before they stepped into view.

“Well,” said Grandpa as he leaned against a tree trunk, “with a lot of help.”

“But you created a place for writers and artists. You dismissed that idea when I told you what I wanted to do with this land. You
hate
what I do.”

“Stesha, I was a kid. I was threatened by all the people who swarmed around you, wanting something from you.”

“Solace about their future.” My grandmother’s arms were
crossed in front of herself protectively, defensively. “What was so wrong about giving them that?”

“I was afraid that I would lose you.”

“We lost each other.”

“Angelheart, you didn’t think I cared, but I was listening. I always listened to you. I wasn’t man enough for you back when we were kids.”

Rain clouds must have clustered while I was journaling, because they released a soft mist. Grandma’s face angled skyward, as though she were washing away the cobwebbed remains of their troubled past. Birdsong erupted at that moment, much louder than the raucous score this morning.

This wasn’t a regular plot of land Grandpa George had developed to be his second home. And it was a heck of a lot more than an inn whose bookings would fill his retirement coffers, more than a retreat for writers and artists, more than a sanctuary for a wounded family.

Arms hugged around myself, I looked upon the beautiful, improbable truth, lifting my eyes from the rooflines of the fairy houses to the matching roofline of Grandpa’s creation. No wonder Ohia had felt so familiar. Its inspiration came from our original fairy village. But this was conceived and designed and built with love—only love—for one woman: Grandma Stesha. I wanted to hold her hands in mine. I wanted to stare into her beautiful violet eyes that had looked upon parts of the world that few ever saw, those eyes that penetrated people’s souls where few ever ventured. Most of all, I wanted to tell her,
For a
woman who can see far into the future, you can be awfully shortsighted about people. Just look around you, Grandma. Really look.

Other books

Tessa's Touch by Brenda Hiatt
A Highlander for Christmas by Christina Skye, Debbie Macomber
A Bad Boy for Christmas by Kelly Hunter
The Abducted Book 0 by Roger Hayden
New Heavens by Boris Senior
Catilina's Riddle by Steven Saylor
All or Nothing by Deborah Cooke