Bittersweet (2 page)

Read Bittersweet Online

Authors: Sarah Ockler

BOOK: Bittersweet
8.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I swallowed hard.

After all the late-night arguments, the separate bedrooms, the unspoken glares, things between my parents had just gone from pretty bad to unfixably worse.

“Mom?” I said quietly, still clutching the pillow. “Are you—”

“Almost ready, Hudson. Go down and tell your …” She almost choked on the word, clearing her throat as she opened the top drawer and swept in the bra like crumbs from the breakfast table. “Your
father
… ask him to start the car.”

“But whose—”

“It’s an hour and a half drive to Rochester and we still need to take Max to the sitter’s.” She bumped the drawer closed with her hip, turning toward me with a pinched grin as the mirror shook behind her. “Big night tonight, baby. Let’s get moving!”

After we dropped off my little brother, Mom gave me the
front seat next to Dad. He quizzed me on my routine, and as I verbally walked through each step, guilt jabbed me in the chest. He’s the one who supported my ice-skating, who told Mom they
had
to find a way to make it work, even if it meant selling Hurley’s, the old diner she’d owned since before they were married. He’d said if I made it to nationals later that year, we’d probably have to move anyway—find a bigger city with better access to private ice time. Interview special coaches and home tutors. Look for sponsorships. Whatever it took, Dad was ready and willing, my cheerleader, my number one sideline support system. Still, there was something off between us that night—something uncomfortable I’d never felt before I discovered the bra. Mom hadn’t said anything else about it, and from the backseat en route to Rochester’s Luby Arena, she stared silently out her window as the highway exits passed.

“You okay?” Kara Shipley asked later, squeezing my hand. My best friend and I were practically twins, and together in the prep area at Luby, we looked the part. Two fourteen-year-olds from Watonka, New York. Slick, strawberry blond buns pinned and sprayed into place. Red-and-gray warm-up jackets with our local club logo—a bison, for Buffalo Bisonettes—embroidered like a badge near the top right shoulder. On our skating dresses underneath, we each wore a silver rabbit pin—our personal good luck charms for every event.

I nodded. “Just … nerves.” I wanted to tell her about what I’d found, what I suspected, but when I thought of my mother, stopping her ironing to inspect the offending item and then whisking
it into the dark of the dresser drawer, my insides burned.

Kara gave me another squeeze. “Don’t worry, Hud. You’ll rock this place tonight. Just ignore the cameras and breathe.” With her free hand she rubbed my back, her palm soft and warm through the nylon dress. I’d almost forgotten about the cameras. Tonight’s Empire Games was just a recreational competition, but the sponsor had invited the media to spotlight me since I was the favorite for next month’s North Atlantic regionals—the gateway to everything I’d ever trained for. Tonight would be my big public debut—I’d show off my signature moves on live TV, turn more than a few heads, and fire a warning shot to my upcoming regional competition.

Ladies and gentlemen, Hudson Avery! Remember this night, and you’ll be able to tell your kids that you knew her when!

“Hudson?” Kara frowned in the mirror, her hand still warm on my back. I took a deep breath as instructed and flashed her a tight smile—the same kind Mom had given me in her bedroom earlier. The same one she’d given my dad as she shuffled me to the front seat and arranged herself in the back. The same one she was probably giving him then, all the way up in the stands.

As the announcer called our names, we glided onto the ice like a long red-and-gray snake. I found my parents in their seats and waved. Mom had the video camera trained on the rink, but she was turned away, looking at the side doors where the event officials had gathered. There were directors from all the regional rinks, and most of the girls had private coaches, too; mine was there with the others, chatting up the CEO of
Empire Icehouse, Western New York’s largest pro shop. He was an honorary judge.

I looked back at the stands as Dad gave me a small wave. His leg was bouncing up and down like he’d had too much coffee. My parents were sitting right next to each other, shoulders almost touching, but for all the miles between them, they might as well have been in different arenas.

After the parade of skaters, we settled into our reserved seats. Alternating with girls from eight other local clubs, we slid out one at a time to perform our programs—first round. Just as my club predicted, I owned it.

Hours later, seven of us remained in the final round to compete for the big prize: five thousand dollars cash, plus new equipment and upgrades for the entire club—an invaluable sponsorship courtesy of Empire Icehouse.

I was the only one left from the Buffalo club. The last shot. The sure thing.

As the opening chords of my music floated onto the ice, I felt the cameras zoom in on my face, and I forced a smile. My skating friends and coaches were counting on me. I was counting on me. The whole
city
was counting on me, its lone Bisonette, twirling like a ballerina in the spotlight.

By this time next year, I’d be famous, and everyone would know where I’d come from.

I skated over the smooth, white rink and sped up for the first jump. Nailed it. Slid into a long, leaning glide, sailing across the ice on one skate and picking up speed for my double axel.
Nailed that one, too. After months of intense workouts with my coach and choreographer, I’d learned my program impossibly well—memorized it until it was absolutely error-proof. Maybe that’s why, as my feet glided across the ice like poured water, my thoughts had the space to stretch and wander. With four minutes to spare, my mind walked home, straight into the muffled arguments that had splintered our family like cracks in the ice—
We can’t afford this. She needs to stay in school. I’m not selling the diner. What about Max? We can’t just move.
It found Dad in the family room on the couch. It took notice of his late nights at the office and Mom’s at Hurley’s. It cataloged all the uncorrelated evidence, all the way up to tonight. Mom knew that bra wasn’t mine the second she found it in the laundry, but she’d folded it and put it in my room anyway, as if burying it between my girlishly straight jeans and baggy sweatshirt would change the inevitable truth.

I leaned in for my next combination, and suddenly I could see into our future—it was all there, right before me. Dad would leave. Mom would get stuck with me and Max, who was only five and wouldn’t understand. We’d probably have to move anyway—downsize, sacrifice, change. All because of … what? Who? My father, who’d given me my first pair of ice skates when I was just four years old? My father, who’d worked hard to pay for the lessons, the equipment, the private coach, the entry fees? My father, who’d never missed a practice or competition, always cheering from the sidelines, encouraging but never overbearing, loving but never smothering?

Something kicked me then, right in the chest. I fought to breathe, to keep the sting from my eyes, the shake from my limbs. I looked at my parents sitting in the stands, my father like he’d rather be anywhere but next to the woman he married. I looked at him not looking at me, not looking at her, and for the first time in the history of my competitions, I didn’t want to win. I didn’t want the money or the Icehouse gear for the club or the TV interviews they’d lined up for me. I didn’t want to go to regionals in Lake Placid or sectionals after that. I didn’t want any more lessons or competitions or all the big, impossible dreams that came with them. If the ice beneath my feet was the reason for the cracks in my parents’ marriage, I didn’t want any of it.

I watched them, wanting against the odds the simple gestures that meant things were okay—Dad’s arm around my mother, her hand comfortably on his knee. Instead, Dad was still, alone. Mom had suddenly moved several rows in front of him, the camera glued to her face.

Instead of my impressive triple flip/triple toe loop combo, I did a single axel. Then I skipped my camel spin and just kept skating, curving into figure eights as if it were a beginner’s lesson. I sensed the confusion from my home team and the coaches who’d seen me nail this stuff a hundred times in training, but I ignored it, pushed it down my legs, out through my skates, deep beneath the ice. When it was time for my grand finale, I did a halfhearted lutz, barely making a full rotation above the rink. On the other end of my jump, I crossed my skates and landed in a score-killing wobble.

The arena was silent.

As the next girl skated out to start her program, I slipped into the girls’ bathroom, waiting for my mother to rush in after me.

She didn’t come.

“Hudson Avery.” At the end of the event, I sat numb in the kiss-and-cry room and listened for my abysmal scores, thinking about all the things that would end that night. The Empire Games. My parents’ marriage. The skating career I no longer wanted. And the only shot my fellow Bisonettes had at those much-needed rink and equipment upgrades. I beat them all out in the first round only to choke when it really counted. Mostly, they were too shocked and disappointed to ask, too confused to assume my on-ice meltdown was anything other than an unforgivably bad case of nerves. I left without speaking to my coach or saying good-bye to the girls. I ignored the pinch in my stomach when I saw Kara’s face, her eyes glassy and red, her mouth opened in an unspoken question:
What happened out there?

In the car on the way home, Dad gave my knee a light squeeze and told me things would work out. That I just needed to look forward, to focus on the upcoming regionals—the stuff that really counted. Tonight was just a little setback, he said; I’d nail it next time for sure.

I met Mom’s gaze in the side mirror, tired and sad with nothing to say, and I knew what Dad didn’t: There wasn’t going to
be
a next time. Not for him and Mom. Not for me and skating. Not for any of us.

Chapter One

 
Damsels in Distress
 

Dark chocolate cupcakes with red peppermint mascarpone icing, edged with chocolate and crushed candy canes

 

In three years of baking for Hurley’s Homestyle Diner in Watonka, New York,
I’ve never met a problem a proper cupcake couldn’t fix. And while I haven’t
quite
perfected the recipe to fix my father, I’m totally on the verge.

“Taste this.” I pass a warm cupcake across the prep counter to Dani and lick a gob of cherry-vanilla icing from my thumb. “I think it’s the one.”

My best friend sighs. “That’s what you said about the blueberry lemon batch. And the white mocha ones. Have you
seen
this thing walkin’ around behind me? It’s the Great Cupcake Booty of Watonka.” She turns and shakes it, a few corkscrew curls springing loose from the pile on her head.

“Last one. I promise.”

“Nice breakfast. You’re lucky I …
mmmph
… oh my
God
!” Her copper-brown eyes widen as she wolfs down a big bite.

“I used half the sugar this time and buttercream instead of cream cheese. Doesn’t compete with the cherry as much.”

“Whatever you did, it’s delish.” She wipes her hands on an apron and goes back to prepping for our open, topping off small glass pitchers of maple syrup. I love baking at the diner on Saturday mornings, especially when Dani’s on first shift. There’s something peaceful about it—just the two of us here in the stainless steel kitchen, radio on low, the
hiss-pop-hiss
of the big coffeemakers keeping us company while the winter sky goes from black to lavender to a cool, downy gray.

I rinse the mixing bowls and set them back on the counter, rummaging through my stash for the next batch: eggs, butter, raw cane sugar, cocoa powder, heavy cream, espresso, shaved dark chocolate, a handful of this, a sliver of that, no measuring required. Every cupcake starts out a blank canvas, ingredients unattached to any shared destiny until I turn on the mixer. Now Dani stands on her toes to see into the bowl and together we watch it swirl, streaks of white and pale yellow and black, electric beaters whirring everything into a perfect brown velvet.

“You really are an artist, Cupcake Queen.” Dani smiles, hefting the tray of syrups onto her shoulder and pushing through the double doors into the dining room.

Cupcake Queen.
I owe the newspaper for that one. “Teen’s Talent Turns Struggling Diner into Local Hot Spot: Cupcake
Queen Wows Watonka with Zany Creations,” by Jack Marshall, staff reporter. The article’s preserved in a crooked glass frame on the wall behind the register, right next to an autographed black-and-white photo of Ani DiFranco and three one-dollar bills from Mom’s first sale as the new owner. You can see it clearly if you’re sitting at the front counter in the seat on the far left—the one with the torn leatherette that pokes the back of your thighs—if you lean over and squint. I don’t need to squint, though. I’ve read it so many times I can recite it backward.
Creations zany with Watonka wows queen cupcake: spot hot local into diner struggling turns talent teen’s.

Other books

Knee-Deep in Wonder by April Reynolds
Knitting Rules! by Stephanie Pearl–McPhee
Making Headlines by Jennifer Hansen
Serengeti by J.B. Rockwell
Child of Time by Spencer Johnson
Root of Unity by SL Huang
The Silver Horse by Kate Forsyth