Somewhere Out There (8 page)

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Authors: Amy Hatvany

BOOK: Somewhere Out There
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Peters spoke again. “I’ll see if I can find you some conditioner.”

“Thanks,” I said, pushing down the urge I felt to collapse.

“You’re welcome. Now do us all a favor and go wash off that stink.”

As weak as I was, I managed to shuffle to the bathroom, unsure if once I was there, I’d have the energy or inclination to get myself clean. I supposed that I could. I could do it like I’d have to do everything from now on—forcing each movement, each breath into my lungs. Putting one foot in front of the other until someday, I’d find a way to be far, far away from this pain.

Natalie

In fifth grade, the year Natalie found out she was adopted, she began telling herself stories. Not just the stories about whom her birth mother might be, but ones involving people she saw every day. She would lie in her bed, whispering to herself, acting out the kinds of conversations she wished were real.

“Hi, Natalie,” she would say in a high-pitched voice, pretending to be Sophia Jensen, who was friends with practically everyone in their class. Sophia had bright blue eyes and thick red hair, which her mother fashioned into a French braid almost every day, setting off a frenzy of other girls wearing the same style. She was the girl everyone wanted to sit next to at lunch; the person who always received more Valentine’s Day cards than anyone else. She was also the girl Natalie wished most to have as a friend.

“Hi, Sophia,” Natalie would say, lowering her voice again, back to being herself.

“You look so pretty today,” Natalie said, switching to her Sophia voice.

“Really?” Natalie replied, as herself.

“Yes,” Natalie answered, as Sophia. “Do you want to come over to my house this weekend? I’m having a party. A sleepover.”

“Wow,” Natalie said, as herself again. “That’s so nice of you. I’d love to.”

“I just know everyone will be so happy you’re going to be there,” Natalie said, pretending to be Sophia once more. “We all think you’re so smart and like you so much.”

But the truth was, instead of attending parties, Natalie spent most of her time alone, or with her mother, who stayed home to take care of Natalie while her father went to work at his law firm. They lived in a large, three-story Tudor on a bluff in West Seattle that overlooked the Puget Sound. The house was surrounded by a thick forest of western hemlocks, red alders, and Douglas firs, and Natalie’s room was on the third floor and had wide, clear windows, making her feel as though she were flying. She often stared out at the water, dreaming about the places across the ocean she might someday go, wishing she had a sister or brother to play with, or the courage to invite one of the girls from school over to her house. She wanted a best friend. But Natalie was quiet, the student who knew the answers to her teachers’ questions but never raised her hand. She had a tendency to speak only when spoken to. At recess, she sat on a bench outside and kept her nose in a book—she loved anything by Judy Blume or Beverly Cleary—watching the other girls play on the monkey bars or jump rope together, wondering how they made talking to each other look so easy. As she peeked at them, she tried not to look too anxious, waiting for someone to invite her to join in, but no one ever did.

There wasn’t a day Natalie got off the bus that her mother wasn’t on the corner, waiting. Now that she was ten, she wished her mom would at least wait for her inside the house—none of the other kids had parents that waited for them on the street—but every time she dropped a hint about being able to walk the three blocks from the bus stop on her own, her mother pretended not to hear.

One Friday afternoon in April, the last day of class before spring break, Natalie and her mother entered their house and closed the door behind them. Natalie hung up her jacket on the coat rack, as she knew her mother expected her to, and set her backpack on the floor in its designated spot. “Can I watch
Rugrats
?” she asked. The cartoon was Natalie’s favorite show.

“You don’t have any homework?” Natalie shook her head. “All right. But put your laundry away first, please. It’s on your bed.”

Obediently, Natalie nodded, and turned toward the stairs.

“Shoes, Natalie!” her mother called out, and Natalie turned around and went back to the entryway, where she’d forgotten to put the white Keds she’d kicked off her feet onto the shelf in the closet. As her mother looked on, Natalie set them in their appropriate place, next to her dark green galoshes and the black slippers her father liked to wear when he got home from work. There were certain ways her mother liked things done: freshly washed and folded clothes needed to be put away in their proper places, never randomly shoved in one of Natalie’s drawers, or worse, left sitting around. Doors always needed to be shut, towels hung in the exact middle of the bar, lights turned off when you left a room. Shoes needed to be on the shoe rack.

“If your life is messy on the outside,” her mother had told her for as long as Natalie could remember, “your insides feel messy, too.”

Natalie didn’t really understand what her mother meant by that statement—she felt just fine if her dirty clothes landed on the floor instead of in the hamper, or if she forgot to put her breakfast dishes in the sink. Sometimes, she wondered what would happen if her mother walked into Natalie’s room to find her daughter’s entire wardrobe strewn across the carpet. She imagined the look of shock on her mother’s face, taking some small measure of satisfaction from the thought, followed immediately by a ripple of guilt. However overly stringent some of her mother’s rules might be, Natalie loved her, and wanted to keep her happy. She tried to do what was expected of her, if only to keep the peace.

Twenty-five years later, after dropping Hailey off at her school and then saying good-bye to Henry in his classroom, Natalie made her way to the preschool’s parking lot. Just as she reached into her purse for her car keys, she looked up to see Katie, whose son, Logan, was in Henry’s class and had invited Henry over to play that afternoon. Katie was alone now, so Natalie assumed Logan was already inside, too. Katie wore gray sweats and her brown hair was twisted into a messy bun on top of her head. She had the kind of good skin and natural beauty that didn’t require makeup, something Natalie envied. With her light complexion and fair lashes, if Natalie didn’t put on a little mascara, she barely looked like she had a face.

“Can Henry still come over this afternoon?” Katie asked.

“Yes, thanks,” Natalie said with a smile. “He’s excited.”

“Logan is, too. I’ll bring Henry home around five, if that’s okay?”

“Perfect.” Luckily, Henry wasn’t the only one with a playdate that day—Hailey was going to her friend Ruby’s house, too—Natalie had planned it that way so she could work on a dessert order she needed to finish for a party the next night without the kids clamoring for her attention.

But first, she needed to go see her mother. Natalie had spoken to her mom earlier that morning, while she fed Hailey and Henry scrambled eggs, asking if she could come over for coffee around ten. Natalie thought about the guilt she had felt in her mother’s presence that day all those years ago when while working on her family tree. The guilt she still felt, today, when she thought about bringing up the subject of finding her birth mother. When she turned eighteen, Natalie had thought about registering with an adoption reunion organization, so if her birth mother was looking for her, she’d be easier to find. This was in 1998, before the Internet had taken over as the only way to get things done, so the process would have been more involved than simply typing her name into an online system—she would have had to go to the registry’s office and fill out hard copies of paperwork. But when she talked with her dad about the idea, he begged her to reconsider.

“You know how your mom is,” he said, running one of his large hands through his salt-and-pepper hair. Natalie knew that no one would ever look at the two of them and suspect they were father and daughter. That was one of the disconcerting realities of being adopted—you look at your parents, your entire family, and see nothing of yourself reflected back.

“She takes everything so personally,” her father continued. “She’ll be devastated.”

At the time, Natalie conceded that he was right, so she let the idea go, reasoning that there wasn’t any urgency, any real logistical need for her to find her birth mother. It was more a general curiosity, a wondering about the past. So what if one day the previous summer she had chased after a woman walking in the Junction who resembled an older version of Natalie, only to catch up with her and find that other than being petite and having blond hair, the woman looked nothing like her at all. So what if Natalie sometimes felt a dull, strange sense of emptiness she didn’t know how to explain to anyone else, but often wondered if that feeling was the reason she had a harder time opening up to other people—if after being abandoned by her birth mother, she couldn’t help but be wary of letting other people in, showing them who she was, for fear that they’d leave her, too. Natalie had a good family—a family who loved and provided for her. She reminded herself that was more than a lot of people had; she told herself that would have to be enough.

But didn’t she, as Kyle had said, have the right to know more about the woman who gave birth to her? Intellectually, her curiosity made perfect sense, but as she parked her car in her parents’ driveway, she knew that what made sense to everyone else didn’t always align with what made sense to her mother. She didn’t like emotional messes any more than physical ones.

It was almost ten by the time Natalie grabbed the small box of currant and almond scones she’d baked before the kids had gotten up—she always kept a little something in the freezer, ready to be put in the oven at a moment’s notice—climbed out of her car, and entered the house. “Mom?” she called as she took off her shoes and put them on the rack in the closet. “Where are you?”

“In the kitchen,” her mother answered.

Natalie walked down the hall and through the family room into the large, square kitchen her parents had recently updated with new maple cabinets and restaurant-quality, stainless-steel appliances. Her mother stood in front of the sink, wearing yellow rubber gloves, black yoga pants, and a blue hoodie. At sixty-eight, she wore her silver-streaked black hair in a stylish, chin-length bob. Natalie set the box she carried on the counter, then stepped over to give her mother a quick hug and kiss on the cheek.

“You know you have a dishwasher for that,” she said, nodding her head toward the sink full of soapy water and what she assumed were the pans from the previous night’s dinner.

“I know.” Her mother shrugged. “But with just your father and me, it takes forever to fill the thing up. Besides, it’s relaxing.”

“Zen and the art of dishwashing?” Natalie said as she settled onto one of the stools lining the granite-topped island in the middle of the room, waiting for her mother to finish.

“Exactly,” her mother said, turning to smile at Natalie as she set the last dish in the rack by the sink. She pulled off her gloves and set them on the counter. “Coffee?”

“Yes, thanks. I brought scones.”

“My favorite.” She grabbed two mugs from the cupboard and filled them with coffee from the pot she’d apparently already brewed. Natalie took one of the cups from her mother and set it in front of her so it could cool.

Her mother sat down next to her at the counter and held her coffee with both hands, as though warming them. Even their fingernails were different—her mother’s long and elegant versus Natalie’s short and square. “How are you?”

“I’m good.” What Natalie actually felt was anxious, but she was trying not to show it.

Her mom reached inside the box and broke a piece off of one of the scones, then popped it inside her mouth. “Mmm,” she murmured. “Fantastic. I love the almonds.”

“Thanks,” Natalie said, trying to find the right way to bring up the subject they needed to discuss. But first, she spent a while making small talk with her mom, inquiring about her volunteer work at the food bank and the European vacation she and Natalie’s father were planning in the spring.

“And how are my gorgeous grandbabies?” her mother asked after they’d each finished eating a scone and decided to move to the more comfortable overstuffed couches in the family room.

“They’re good, too,” Natalie said. They settled into opposite ends of the same couch, and Natalie looked at her mom, who appeared about as relaxed as Natalie had ever seen her, and decided there was no sense waiting any longer. She dove into why she was there. “Hailey actually has a project for school that reminded me of one I had to do, too.”

“Really?” her mom said. “What is she doing?”

“Our family tree.” The muscles in her mother’s face froze, as Natalie suspected they would, but she forged ahead anyway. “I know this is a touchy subject, but it reminded me of how I wanted to include my birth mother on mine and you didn’t want me to. It made me think that it’s time for me to at least know her name.” She paused. “Kyle and I talked about it, and he thinks my knowing more about her might be a good idea, too.” Her mom loved Kyle like he was her own son; Natalie brought him into the conversation because she wanted her mother to see that this idea wasn’t just coming from her. She had her husband’s full support.

Her mother pressed her thin lips together and looked out the large picture window, so Natalie did, too. The rain from the previous night had dissipated before dawn, and strong winds had blown away the steel-wool clouds. Now, the sky was an intense, brilliant shade of blue, as though the storm had scrubbed it clean.

After a minute of silence, Natalie spoke. “Mom?” she said. “What do you think?”

“Why,” her mother asked, “do you think this would be a good idea?” Her voice was quiet but tense, and her fingers were linked tightly together in her lap.

“Because she’s the only blood relative I have, other than the kids.” Her mother closed her eyes and jerked her chin upward, as though Natalie had hit her. “Mom, please. I’m not trying to hurt you. I just think if I want to know my birth mother’s name, I should be able to.” Natalie grabbed a throw pillow and hugged it to her chest. “Honestly, I feel like I should already know it.”

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