The Push by Ashley Audrain (e reading malayalam books txt) ๐
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- Author: Ashley Audrain
Read book online ยซThe Push by Ashley Audrain (e reading malayalam books txt) ๐ยป. Author - Ashley Audrain
One day he brought two older people with him, one of them with his very large nose and the other one his very dark eyes. He invited them to sit down and brought them coffee from the counter and a croissant to share. He placed two napkins gently on the table, one in front of each of them, like he was serving long-standing customers at a fine-dining establishment.
He had bought his first house! This news thrilled me. I listened as he explained each of the listing photos on his phone. The kitchen entrance is there, and this leads to the powder room, and oh, this will be the babyโs room. He would be having a baby! Like my Sam. I wanted him to look at me so I could smile, so I could acknowledge that I cared about his future, that I had worried about whether this nice young man had someone in his life who loved him.
They talked about property taxes and a roof replacement and how long his new commute would be. And then the mother asked about her sonโs plans for when the baby was born in just a monthโs time.
โI can come back to the city for the week to help, whatever you need. Dishes, laundry. Itโs no problem for me, Iโve got the time. I can bring the cot from the spare room at our house.โ Her voice was so hopeful, and I knew before the son replied that it would be one of the hardest things she ever had to hear. He explained that Saraโs mother would come instead. That it would just be better for Sara that way. That she could visit afterward, once they were settled, once theyโd had some time together, just the three of them. And Saraโs mom. He would let her know when she could come. Maybe a few weeks or so later. Theyโd have to see how things went.
The motherโs head moved slowly forward and then back and she mustered the words, โOf course, honey,โ and she put her hand on his for the most fleeting moment before she tucked it back beneath her thighs under the table.
A motherโs heart breaks a million ways in her lifetime.
I left then โ I didnโt want to eavesdrop anymore. I walked the long way home.
52
There was a moment in the car on our way home, I canโt remember where from. We turned to look at each other in the front seat, muffling laughs and locking eyes, the same reflex we used to share when Violet said something funny. That was all that mattered โ that we shared this intimate knowing of each other. That weโd created her together and now here she was, saying these impossibly grown-up things sheโd learned from us in her twiggy, eight-year-old voice. How had I been able to find that moment of perfectly typical joy with you? With her? Not a day went by that I didnโt replay what had happened at that intersection.
But life was moving on, I realized as I looked away from you, whether I wanted it to or not. We were together, the three of us, in the car without him, looking at one another like we had before. He had been gone for more than a year.
I missed him desperately. I wanted to say his name in the car so that you both had to hear it. He should have been there with us.
I reached down to the bag at my feet and pulled out a small package of tissues. I looked back at Violet in the seat behind you. I pulled one out and tossed it over my head into the backseat. She watched the tissue float up and then land on her lap. I pulled another one, and then another, and another. You looked away from the road and glanced at me once, and then again, and then to your rearview mirror to watch her. Violetโs eyes met yours, and then she stared quietly out her window as the tissues sailed around the backseat.
We used to do this with Sam sometimes when he cried in the car. We used to toss the tissues all around him until his long, sad sobs became a crescendo of laughter. He loved them. Weโd go through a whole big box sometimes, mad with giggles, the soft white parachutes filing the car, the childrenโs squeals heightening, our tired, relieved faces grinning aimlessly ahead.
Neither of you said a thing while I did this for him that afternoon. I turned away from you when the package was empty, and I placed it on the dashboard, so that youโd have to see it as you drove. There were fields, I think, outside the window. I remember looking out and wanting to run through them until you caught me by the hood of my sweatshirt. If you ran after me at all.
That night I asked you if Violet should see someone. A child psychologist to help with the grief. She seemed so reluctant to talk about him.
โI think she seems to be coping pretty well. Iโm not sure she needs it.โ
โThen what about us? Together. Couples therapy.โ We couldnโt seem to talk about him either. You hadnโt even mentioned what Iโd done in the car.
โI think weโre coping pretty well, too.โ Youโd kissed me on the forehead. โBut you should go. By yourself. You should try again.โ
I walked aimlessly through our quiet house.
Youโd been building a model in your den and your things were spread across the desk under the swing arm of the lamp. Superglue and a cutting mat and a set of knives with interchangeable blades. The tiny foam-board walls were lined up at the side. Violet loved to watch you build models of your work.
I picked up the blades one by
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