So Much More - Kim Holden Page 0,59

I just came back to Kansas City for a visit. It’s kind of late to get a motel room, and I was wondering if maybe I could stay with you, just for tonight?”

The pause that comes brings tears to my eyes. The silence sounds like denial.

“Never mind, it’s okay. I shouldn’t have called.”

I’m ready to press the button on my phone to disconnect when she calls out loudly as if she senses my looming escape, “No! No, of course you can stay with me tonight. I apologize for the hesitation. I think I’m just in shock hearing your voice. The good kind of shock, but still shock.”

She gives me her address and I Uber a ride to her apartment. It’s the same apartment she’s lived in for as long as I can remember. The same apartment that offered me refuge all those years ago.

Stepping inside, and into Claudette’s open arms, settles my nerves. She looks the same; her black hair smattered with silver and her reading glasses perched on the end of her nose. I’ve always thought of her glasses as a sharp underscore to her intense owl-like eyes. She’s short in stature and heavy set in build. She’s a safe place. The only safe place in this city as far as I’m concerned.

Time yields results, even against the defiant

present

Justine’s letter is wavy and rigid now that it’s dry. It feels brittle, like the words it contains.

I read it again this morning as soon as I woke up. I think I was hoping it was all a nightmare.

It wasn’t.

If anything, it hurts worse in the daylight.

Last night it gutted me with intense anger.

This morning it gutted me with sadness—mourning what could have been.

What could have been…

I know Justine isn’t expecting a response—that she’s probably hoping against one—but I feel like I need to write her.

I dig her envelope out of the trash—it reeks with the days old decay taking place in the bottom of the dark, moist bin. I jot her address down and quickly discard it again. I transfer the address to an envelope and place my folded letter inside. I’ll mail it tomorrow on my way to work.

I glance at the time on my phone; it’s just after eleven. The deli is open, so I head down to see if Mrs. Lipokowski has any forwarding information on Faith.

The place is crowded with the early lunch rush. I buy a six-inch roast beef and ask her if she can stop by apartment three when she closes up this afternoon because I don’t want to take up any extra time while she’s swamped in paying customers. She agrees.

And at three o’clock she knocks on my door. “Hi there, Seamus.”

“Hi, Mrs. L. I won’t keep you, I know you’re on your way home to relax. Hope told me last night that Faith left.”

She raises her eyebrows. “Hope talked to you?”

That isn’t the information I want to focus on, but I answer to move along to the important stuff. “Yeah, I walked with her to the convenience store.”

“Huh.” She looks perplexed.

“Faith moved out?” I ask because I’m done with the Hope talk.

“Her rent is paid until the end of the month, but she didn’t know if she would be back.”

“I was wondering if she told you where she was going? Or if she left a forwarding address? You know, in case she doesn’t return?”

“She didn’t. She seemed preoccupied when she stopped by to talk to me; like in her mind she was already someplace else. I felt bad for her. She’s a determined young lady, but I have a feeling her decision was weighing on her heart.”

None of the words I’ve just heard make me feel any better about Faith leaving. I was hoping she would tell me Faith found her birth mother and moved closer to her. Or that she got a new job, in a new city that would complement and embrace her potential. Instead, I’m left with uncertainty tarnished with negativity. I hate that for Faith. “Okay. Please let me know if you hear from her.”

She smiles softly; it’s a gesture meant to comfort. “I will, Seamus.”

“Thank you.” The words don’t feel appreciative. They feel like I’m begging her to deliver good news to me. Sooner than later.

She nods and turns to walk toward her apartment. “Have a good night.”

After Mrs. Lipokowski leaves, my mind goes back to Justine’s letter. It’s a presence in the apartment, like another person occupying the space. I don’t pick it up. I don’t

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