(Excerpt from The Lemonade Year a finished novel seeking representation. Cricket it a resident at the nursing home where Oliver works and where Nina's (the protagonist) father recently past away. This is also where Nina and Oliver met. This scene takes place in the house Oliver lives in.)
(The photo is of actor, Taylor Kitsch--whom I imagine would make an nice Oliver in the movie version of this book.)
“This makes you uneasy, doesn’t it?” Oliver
says.
“What?” I ask.
“Us,” he continues, looking at me
with unsettling focus. “Me.”
“No,” I answer and wonder if I mean
it.
“So how about it?” Oliver asks. “I think Nate
would approve.”
Hearing him refer to Dad as Nate in
the present tense reminds me that Dad is gone. It feels like hands slipped
suddenly around my heart squeezing tight like trying to keep it from beating,
but it beats instead.
“What are you afraid of?” Oliver
asks.
Everything. I need to change the
subject so I turn the question of family back to him.
“So, is your family around here?” I
ask.
“No,” Oliver says, turning back to
the keys and picking out a tune. “They all live in Tennessee.”
“What brought you here?” I ask.
“School,” he says, his back to me, repeating
the same set of notes, having found the sequence he seemed to be looking for.
“That math degree.”
I nod even though he can’t see. I
watch him from the perspective of walking away—his back to me and his thoughts
elsewhere. His shoulders and arms move, keeping up with his hands as they slide
across the keys. I don’t recognize what he plays, but the melancholy of it
hurts my throat.
“Why didn’t you go back home?” I ask,
unsure if he can hear me.
“Had a job I didn’t want to give up
at the time,” he says over his playing and then he reaches up from the keys and
straightens a picture on the piano that I’ve never taken the time to look at
closely.
“I thought you didn’t like the math
jobs,” I say.
“I didn’t,” he goes back to his
playing. “It was the other one.”
The Parkinson’s patient.
“You stayed to work with him,” I say
letting him know that I understand.
“Couldn’t bring myself to leave,”
Oliver says and plays a few more notes in the sequence. “Especially not once he
got bad and I moved in with him.”
I look around at the house and then
it strikes me why this place seems so out of the ordinary for a young man in
his late twenties.
“This is his place?” I ask.
Oliver nods, still facing away from
me.
“You stay here still to take care of
the house?” I ask, although there’s no question.
“It’s a nice arrangement,” Oliver
says, his voice growing distant. “While it lasts I guess.”
“You miss him,” I say.
“Not yet,” Oliver says oddly. “But I
will.”
I get up and go over to the piano. He
must feel my approach because he moves over and I sit beside him. He stops
playing and looks forward. I follow his line of sight to the photo on the
piano. It’s a picture of Oliver and Cricket here in this living room. It is
obvious that the Cricket in this photo is in an earlier stage of his decline
than the one in the nursing home. Oliver looks a bit younger, his hair is
shorter.
“Mr. Cole?” I question and answer
myself at the same time.
Oliver nods. He pecks out a couple of
sad notes and then just lets his hands rest, unmoving on the keys.
“It must be hard to watch him worsen,” I say,
speaking the words I’m sure Oliver wants to say but can’t.
“It’s not advisable to get attached,”
he says.
“It never is,” I say. “It’s likely to
hurt in the end.”
This is true of all the attachments
we form. But what would we do without them?
“It’s worth the risk, though, isn’t
it,” Oliver says, his fingers resting on whatever notes come next.
“Yes,” I say.
He resumes playing. I see that his
mouth tightens and his lips press and release against the emotion they try to
conceal. One tear drops suddenly from his eyes onto his hand as it moves along
the keys. I lift that hand in the midst of its music and kiss the salty spot on
his skin.
“Thank you,” he whispers.
1 comment:
That was beautiful, the picture and the prose *wipes tears*
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