Authors: Norah McClintock
“He told me. I'm sorry.”
Mr. Derrick sighed. “We've had our share of family tragedy, that's for sure. It's been hard on both of us, but I think it's been harder for James.” He paused and looked at me. “Did he tell you about how he got that limp?”
“He said he'd been in an accident.”
“Accident,” Derrick said. He gave the word an odd inflection and paused again, as if he were deciding what to say or whether to say anything at all. “In the end, the police logged it as an accident. It happened last yearâalmost exactly two years after James's mother died. Did he tell you?”
“No.”
“It's probably not something that you should discuss with James,” Mr. Derrick said. “It would only upset him. But since you're tutoring him, well, maybe you should understand a little about him. He's been through a lot. And after his mother died ...” He sighed. “I was in the car with James. I don't blame him, of course. He wasn't himself after everything that had happened. James was very close to his mother.”
What did he mean, he didn't blame James? Had James crashed the car on purpose? Why would he do something like that? I looked at Mr. Derrick's cane and at his badly scarred face. Had that happened in the same crash?
I heard a car engine outside.
Derrick grabbed his cane and stood up. “That must be James. Come on. Let's surprise him.”
We reached the front porch just as James was getting out of his car. He had a piece of paper in his hand and seemed to be studying it.
His dad called his name.
James jumped. He threw the piece of paper into the front seat of the car, slammed the door, and spun around. His eyes went to me.
“Look who I invited for dinner,” his dad said.
James stared at me, processing the fact of my presence.
“Surprise,” I said, smiling even though I felt like the last person on earth he wanted to see.
“Well, what do you say, Dee?” his father said.
Dee?
James mumbled a hello. Suddenly I wished I hadn't come. It was obvious I was making James uncomfortable.
“I'm just about ready to put the salmon on the barbecue,” Mr. Derrick said. “Why don't you each grab a glass of lemonade and come out and sit on the deck?”
James and I made ourselves comfortable on thickly padded chairs under a large umbrella. As Mr. Derrick lit the barbecue and set foil-wrapped packets of vegetables on the grill, the clouds grew darker and darker overhead. A cool breeze started to blow.
“Feel that?” Derrick said. “We're going to get some rain.”
While he worked, I looked around. The backyard was narrow but deep and well landscaped with flower beds and rock gardens. There was even a pond with water lilies floating on it.
“This place must be gorgeous in summer,” I said.
“It is,” Derrick said. “I wish I could take credit, but the previous owners did all the work. The real estate agent assured me that all of the plants and flowers are perennials, so they don't need much care.”
“A good thing, too,” James said. He still seemed dazed by my presence. “My dad teases me about forgetting things, but he's the poster boy for absentminded professors.”
I looked at Mr. Derrick. “You're a professor?”
He nodded. “I took a leave for a while. During the time off, I wrote a book.”
“He means another book,” James said. “He's written a dozen of them.”
Mr. Derrick smiled. “I'm also searching around for a position. I'd like to ease back into the classroom.”
I asked about his book.
“It's hardly a scholarly treatise,” he said with a laugh. “In fact, it's a complete departure for me.”
“It's a history of everyday things,” James said.
“My publisher refers to it as
Everything You Didn't Know You Wanted to Know about Almost Everything
,” Derrick said.
“He's not kidding,” James said. “Did you know that the first vending machines were invented in 215
B.C.
?”
“No way,” I said. I glanced at his father for confirmation.
“James is right,” Mr. Derrick said. “The inventor was a man named Hero of Alexander. A person inserted a coin into his machine, and it dispensed holy water. Unfortunately, the machine couldn't tell a real coin from a fake one. That problem wasn't solved until considerably laterâthe 1880s, in fact. The first commercially successful machines made their appearance in London, England. They dispensed postcards ...”
By the time Derrick put the salmon steaks on to grill, I was convinced that he must be a highly entertaining professor. Not only did he know a lot, he had a real knack for making even the most ordinary things seem fascinating.
I asked if there was anything I could do to help, but he told me that my job as a guest was to relax. When I insisted on doing something, he sent me inside with James to set the table.
“I should wash up,” I said to James when we were finished. He directed me to the bathroom, upstairs to the left.
As I headed up the stairs, I heard Mr. Derrick say, “Pour some more lemonade for everyone, Dee. And then come out here and give me a hand.”
After I'd finished in the bathroom, I took a quick look around. I felt kind of guilty peeking into rooms, but the doors were open, and my dad always said you could learn a lot about people from the stuff they surrounded themselves with.
The first impression I had of Mr. Derrick was confirmed by a quick glance around. The second floor of the house was as immaculate as the first. James's room, small but bright, was at the top of the stairs, looking out over the back of the house. It was sparsely furnished with only a bed, a desk, a bookshelf, and a wooden trunkânot much stuff at all. I wondered what my dad would have made of that. The walls were completely bare. Maybe James hadn't had time to decorate yet.
The middle room was obviously his dad's study. It contained an enormous desk, a computer, dozens of shelves stuffed with books, and piles of cardboard boxes waiting to be unpacked.
The front bedroom, which I glimpsed from the hall, was as Spartan as James's room except for one thing: there were photographs on one wall. Curious, I crept to the door to take a closer look. Several large, framed photographs showed a boyâthe same boyâat various ages, from very young right up to the age of nine or ten. At first I thought they were photos of James. But a quick examination proved me wrong. The boy in the photos resembled James, but where James had hazel eyes, this boy's eyes were clear blue, like Mr. Derrick's. His chin was different tooâmore pointed than James's. Did James have a brother? Where was he now? And why weren't there any pictures of James in his dad's room? Come to think of it, there weren't any pictures of James anywhere in the houseâor of his mother. Were they too painful for James and his father to look at?
Down below, the back door opened and closed again, and I heard low but angry voices.
“ ... I just want to get it over with,” James was saying.
Get what over with? Dinner? It was obvious that James had been taken aback by my presence. Was he wishing that I wasn't here?
“This isn't the time or place for that conversation,” his dad said sharply.
“Butâ”
“You'll do what needs to be done, Dee. We both will.”
I coughed before I started back down the stairs so that James and his dad would know I was coming. But I was drowned out by a deafening thunderclap. A moment later, the sky opened and it began to pour.
“The food,” Mr. Derrick wailed.
I started down the stairs and arrived in the kitchen just in time to see James, soaking wet, dash back into the house with the foil-wrapped vegetables and salmon steaks. He set them down on the table and peeled off his sodden T-shirt. Even from where I was standing, I couldn't help but stare. A huge scar ran diagonally across his back, deep reddish-purple. Then I heard his father's voice, hard and sharp.
“I told you I never wanted to see that thing again,” he snarled. “It's bad enough that he's dead and that it's your faultâyou don't have to flaunt that thing. Go and put a shirt on.”
Dead? Who was deadâthe boy in the pictures upstairs? And what did Mr. Derrick mean when he said that it was James's fault? What had James done?
James turned to leave the room. He paused when he saw me. His face was red. I don't know whether he suspected I'd overheard his dad or not. As he pushed by me, I got a clear look at a tattoo on his upper left bicep. It was an airplane with a single wordâa nameâin the middle of it: Greg. James looked back and saw me staring at it. His eyes hardened, and he ran upstairs.
I wished I could go home. Instead, I went back into the kitchen and asked if there was anything I could do.
“Everything seems to be under control,” Derrick said in an eerily calm voice. “James rescued our food from the barbecue. Please, have a seat. We'll eat as soon as he gets into some dry clothes.”
James returned a few moments later in fresh jeans and a dry T-shirt. The tattoo was hidden under his sleeve. He and his dad glowered at each other for a moment, and the meal got off to an awkward start. I tried the salmon and the vegetables and exclaimed how good they were. James's dad turned his disapproving eyes from James and thanked me, but it seemed as though he was forcing himself to be a gracious host. He began to tell us both about the importance of fish and how it, more than anything else, had led to the colonization of North America and the opening up of the New World. I listened with interest, but James was quiet through the whole meal.
After dessertâan excellent raspberry torte that Mr. Derrick had madeâand more conversation, I said that I should be getting home. James surprised me by offering to drive me. I thanked Mr. Derrick for dinner and said goodbye. James was already on the front porch. It had stopped raining. He used his remote to unlock the car doors.
“Dee!” his dad called from inside the house.
James sighed loudly.
“I'll just be a minute,” he said. “You can wait for me in the car.”
I went out to the driveway and got in the car. As I settled in, I glanced at the piece of paper that James had thrown onto the driver's seat when he'd arrived. A drawing of some kind? I picked it up and looked more closely. It wasn't a drawing after all. It was a mapâof one of the largest cemeteries in the city. Someone had drawn an X through one section of the map and, underneath, had written, “Plot XI, Lot 333.” I wondered who was buried there. James's mom, maybe. But why would he need a map to find her grave? And why had he thrown the map into the car when his dad and I surprised him at the door?
I heard the front door slam and looked up to see James coming down the porch steps carrying a brown paper bag. I put the map facedown on the driver's seat. James opened the door, picked up the map, and tucked it into the back pocket of his jeans. He handed me the bag.
“It's a piece of torte,” he said. “My dad wants you to take some home.”
“Thank him for me,” I said.
James turned the key in the ignition. “I'm really sorry, Robyn.”
“For what?”
“For my dad. For him calling you and dragging you over here.”
“He didn't exactly drag me, James. He invited me, and I accepted.”
“Knowing him, he asked you and then refused to take no for an answer.”
“I was glad to come, James. I had a good time. Your dad's really interesting. He sure knows a lot.”
James backed the car out onto the street, and we drove in silence for a while. He seemed lost in his thoughts.
“Is everything okay?” I said finally.
“Yeah.” His voice was flat. “Why?”
“I don't know. You seem preoccupied.”
“I'm fine. Really.”
This was followed by more silence. It stayed that way until we pulled up outside my dad's building.
“Thanks for coming,” James said. “And thanks for being so nice to my dad. I think he enjoyed having someone around to listen to his stories. It'll be good for him to get back in front of a classroom. He's at his best when he has an audience.”
I wondered if I should ask him about the photographs of the boy that I had seen in his dad's room. Or about the tattoo that had made his dad so angry. No, I decided. It was none of my business. If James wanted to tell me about those pictures or about what had happened to his family, I should let him do it in his way, in his own time.
I reached for the door.
“I really did have a good time, James,” I said.
He smiled at me, but it seemed forced. As soon as I climbed out of the car, he squealed away from the curb. I stared helplessly after him.
I stopped on my way up to my dad's loft and knocked on Nick's door. Orion barked in response, but no one answered.
  .   .   .
Morgan looked surprised when I met her at her locker the next day after school. I'd just offered to go with her to the pet store so that she could buy some treats for her dog, Missy.
“Aren't you supposed to be tutoring James this afternoon?” she said.
“He blew me off. Is there something wrong with me, Morgan? I feel like I'm being punished. First Nick keeps saying that he's too busy to see me, but he always has plenty of time for Danny. Then James asks me to tutor him because he says he wants to do well this year, but he's been avoiding me all dayâand he didn't seem too thrilled when I showed up at his house for dinner yesterday.” Was I the problem? Or was it something else? I'd been hoping he might open up to me a little after our tutoring session.
“Maybe he's embarrassed that his dad invited you,” Morgan said. “Or ...” She hesitated.
“What?” I said.
“Maybe he likes you, but he doesn't know how to deal with it because he knows you have a boyfriend.”
“Maybe have a boyfriend,” I said gloomily. “Wait, what do you mean, he knows I have a boyfriend? I never told him that.”