Mitch kept talking. “Mara, the operative words in that are ‘used to be’. You’ve been clean for fourteen years.”
“You had someone unseal my record?” Yes. I was still whispering.
“Yeah, I did. You were so closed off, in your own world, for two years after that guy left; you gave me no in, nothin’, not one thing, sealed up tight. I wanted to know what your gig was so I looked into you. Great credit. No debt. Decent savings. Some investments, all safe, no risk. No parking tickets. No traffic violations. Only two jobs and three apartments in thirteen years. But when you were a kid, you got hauled in for public intoxication four times before you were sixteen, once for possession of marijuana and once for drunk and disorderly. Kid shit that all kids do except you were with an assclown who was older than you but wasn’t smart enough to keep you safe and not get you caught.”
He said a lot of words and not a single one registered on me.
“You had someone unseal my record?” I repeated.
His arms gave me a slight shake. “Yeah, Mara, I did. I did it a while ago, baby, and when I say a while ago, I mean before I even fixed your washer and I’m tellin’ you,” he leaned even closer to me, “I don’t care.”
This time, my hearing was selective.
“I was young,” I whispered.
“I know that.”
“Home life wasn’t good,” I continued to whisper and Mitch’s face changed again. Gone were the hints of angry and frustrated, now he was just alert. Hyper-alert.
“How not good?” he asked softly.
Again I didn’t hear him.
“I was young. Bill was young. We were close then.”
“Mara –”
I turned my head away and closed my eyes, whispering, “You looked into me.”
It was then I felt my heart beating and it was doing this hard.
He knew about Bill. He’d seen Bill in his element and that was not good. He’d met my Mom and Aunt Lulamae and he knew about them and that was not good either.
All of that was bad.
But this was worse.
I was already a Two Point Five but him knowing about my juvie record, me being stupid, me doing stupid things, me doing more stupid things because I was stupid enough to do them with Bill yanked me down to a Two. Him ever knowing about my home life would put me around a One. Maybe a Point Seven Five. No one wanted to be with a Point Seven Five. No one. Except maybe other Point Seven Fives or lower and I’d already had a lifetime of being around those and I wasn’t going back to that.
I’d worked hard to get away from that. I’d worked hard to put it behind me. I’d worked hard to have a savings. A decent apartment. Nice furniture. Nice clothes. Good friends.
I’d worked hard.
“Mara,” he called.
“Let me go,” I whispered and pushed feebly at his chest.
His arms got tight and he muttered, “Shit, Jesus, Mara, sweetheart, look at me.”
Then it hit me. How angry Mitch got when he walked into Bill’s house. How furious he was with Bill. How he’d lost it.
And at the same time this hit me, it hit me that if Mitch could find this out, Child Protective Services could too.
My head snapped around and my eyes opened. “I’m not like him. Not like what you saw. I’m not like Bill. I left that behind. I left that at home.”
“Jesus, Mara,” Mitch said quietly, watching me closely.
“Bill didn’t leave it behind. I left it behind. Swear to God, I left it behind,” I told him fervently.
“I know, baby.”
“I’ll never let that touch Billy and Billie.” My hands clenched his lapels again and I got up on my toes to get in his face. “I promise, Mitch. Never.”
His eyes bored into mine and he whispered, “Fucking hell, honey, wherever you are now, get the f**k outta there and come back to me.”
I shook my head and kept on target. “You can tell them, anyone, you tell them I promised you and I’ll make certain of it. I’d die before I let that touch those kids, Mitch. I swear to God. I knew he was a drunk and I knew he got high but I never knew it got that bad. I never knew they saw. I never knew they saw what he did. I never knew it until I saw it when you saw it. I knew it was bad but I didn’t know it was that bad. I wouldn’t have left them there if I knew it. Swear to God. Swear to God.” My hands clenched harder into his lapels. “They’re out now and they’re never going back. I promise, no matter how hard it gets, what it costs, they’re never going back.” I pulled his lapels out slightly then pushed them in and whispered, “I swear to God, they’re never going back.”
His hand slid from my hair to curl around the side of my head and his face got within an inch of mine. “Mara, baby, come back to me.”
I didn’t go back to him.
I went back to my earlier, far, far more important theme.
“We’ll never work,” I whispered.
“Mara, stop it and come back to me.”
“The likes of you aren’t for the likes of me,” I told him softly.
“Jesus, baby,” he said softly back, his thumb sweeping my cheekbone, his eyes roaming my face.
“I need to go.”
“You’re not gonna go.”
“I need to go,” I stated urgently.
“Sweetheart, I’m not gonna let you go. You were right, we need to talk.”
“I need to go,” I warned, “before it’s too late.”
He opened his mouth to speak but it was too late.
There was a loud knock in the breezeway. Not at Mitch’s door. Distant.
I knew it was at mine when I heard my mother shout, “Marabelle Jolene Hanover! We’re done f**kin’ with you! Open this goddamned, f**kin’ door!”
Not again!
I froze in Mitch’s arms, my head jerking toward his door and I felt his arms get tight.
Then I tipped my head back to see he’d pressed his lips together like he was fighting against a smile and my eyes narrowed on his mouth, not finding one thing funny. Then something came to me and my eyes shot to his.
“My name is Marabelle Jolene Hanover,” I told him in a whisper.
“What?” he whispered back but that one word trembled and I knew it was with suppressed laughter.
“If that isn’t a trailer trash name…for trailer trash,” I added, “then nothing is.”
His lips twitched and he muttered, “Baby.”
“It is, admit it,” I pushed.