place, where Iâm safe. Itâs like hiding out when youâre little. Under the table or in thecloset or whatever. No one knows Iâm here, and theyâd never think to look for me at Natashaâs.
We sit on her couch, side by side, and share our Lists of Things to Be Grateful For.
âVictoriaâs wonderful spirit,â she says.
âThe stoop,â I say.
âThe Starbucks barista who told me I look like Denise Richards.â
âCoffee after nine p.m.â
âThe way we change over time and become better and worse, in tandem,â Natasha says. She always has one thing on her list that blows my mind a little.
âKarissa. That she exists, but not what sheâs doing,â I say, because Iâve never not read something on my list. Itâs a weird intimacy between us. We donât hold back.
âNew friend?â Natasha says.
âSort of.â I kind of canât believe she hasnât been on any other lists Iâve read to Natasha, but sometimes it takes a while to admit you are grateful for something or someone. Sometimes Iâll write about a great dinner with my father three months later. Like I canât appreciate it from up close, the way some paintings are better from a distance.
âNew mom?â
âNo. Sheâs not the stepmom type. Sheâs one of the in-betweeners.â
It feels mean to talk about Karissa that way, in the old lingo that Iâve always used about Dadâs wives and girlfriends.
âI can live with it. I have love in my life. Iâm filled with gratitude. Iâd like those things for your father even though he is incapable of thatreality.â Natasha says all these yoga things that would sound like total bull coming from most people, but she is legitimately serene. Iâve seen the change, and thatâs even better than meeting someone whoâs always been sweet and kind and wise. I like Natasha even more because she used to be so heinous. âI want your dad to be happy. And you. I want you to have what you want.â She knows but doesnât say that what I want is to have had a mother. Wanting a mom is not the kind of thing you say out loud. Not unless youâre five and have a boo-boo. âAnd Arizona,â Natasha says, with a sigh. She always says Arizonaâs name with a sigh, because she canât fix what went wrong there and it twists her up inside.
There was only one time that I actually tried to tell Arizona about my relationship with Natasha. I floated the idea that Natasha had changed. Said I saw her walking down the street, pregnant and looking all cherubic. Arizona scoffed and said that poor baby and stomped instead of walked the rest of the day.
I wonder if it would be different, now that Arizona has actually used the gift certificate. Itâs the thing that made Natasha worse than the others. The thing that made her unforgivable. I wonder if Arizona actually using the thing makes her hate Natasha less. Or, I guess, more.
Maybe more, since no matter what happiness crap sheâs spouting, I think Arizona did it to get closer to my father, to be the daughter he wants in the hopes that that would make him stop finding new women in his life.
And now that sheâs met Karissa, she must know she failed.
âMonanana!â Victoria calls out, waking up from her nap. Veronicadoesnât have as many words as Victoria, but sheâs every bit as loving. She hugs my legs and gurgles in my direction.
âThey love you,â Natasha says. âTheir big sister.â
âExcept not,â I say. I love-hate when Natasha calls me their sister. I even love-hate it that Victoria knows my name. Itâs light and heavy, right and wrong. I lift Veronica in the air. She has brown eyes and her motherâs old nose. I remember Natashaâs old nose from when she was first with my father, and seeing it on Victoria feels right.
I wish I shared something like
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