Julia McCray was sick of snow. She was sick of looking at snow, and driving in snow,
and especially shoveling snow. She was sick of the need for snow boots, and thick
gloves, and enough outerwear to effectively double a person's girth when they were fully
bundled against the Montana cold.
On the bright side, it was near the end of February, and March would bring warmer
temperatures—if only an increase from the midthirties to the midforties. Any little
improvement would be welcome.
For now, though, it was still damned cold.
And there was still the damned snow.
This was one of those days when she was grateful that she owned her own business
and could work from home. Here it was, ten a.m., and she was still in her flannel pajamas
—a cheerful pink pattern with tiny corgis romping around on them. Her hair was up in a
messy ponytail, and she had thick socks on her feet. Who was going to care? Who was
going to see?
Nobody, she thought bitterly. Certainly nobody hot and male. And what good was it
to be in your pajamas at ten a.m. if there wasn't anybody there to try to take them off of
you?
Julia sighed and padded into her kitchen to make a cup of hot cocoa. When you were
still in your pajamas at ten a.m., it was snowy outside, and you had a fire in the fireplace,
you really needed hot cocoa.
Once the cocoa was ready, with mini marshmallows floating on the surface like
icebergs in a dark sea, she went to her dining room table, where her laptop sat open
beside a notebook filled with various doodles, notes, and pencil sketches.
As a landscape designer, she couldn't do a great deal of work locally during the
wintertime, when the earth was shrouded in a deep layer of snow. But that didn't mean
she could just sit idle, waiting for spring.
She was set to begin work for a new hotel in Bozeman as soon as weather—and the
spring thaw—permitted. For now, she had blueprints of the hotel and a topographical
map of the grounds, and she was beginning to create a design that she could implement
once the temperatures warmed.
The hotel's owners had requested landscaping that would be eco-friendly and in
harmony with the natural environment. With that in mind, she was drawing up her plans
to include native plants, a reclaimed-water irrigation system, solar-powered lighting, and
strategically planted trees that would provide a wind break in the winter and shade in
summer.
A creek ran through the hotel's property, and she wanted to use it to maximum effect
while maintaining the integrity of the waterway. She brought up a clean page on her
sketch pad, drew the basic outlines of the building and the property lines, and began
sketching hardscape, flower beds, a lawn that could be used for weddings and other
special events, and an array of other outdoor zones for uses ranging from quiet relaxation
to after-dinner strolls.
She was so involved in her work that she startled slightly when her cell phone rang.
Julia checked the screen. Mom.
She picked up the phone, rolled her shoulders to ease out the tension, and put on her
game face. Talking to her mother was challenging under the best of circumstances, but
even more so lately. She picked up the phone and answered it.
"Hey, Mom." Her voice sounded warm, friendly, and maybe even a little perky. It
should—she'd had years of practice at cultivating just that voice, specifically for her
mother's phone calls. "What's up?"
"Julia? Is this a good time?"
"Of course. How are you?"
"I can call back if you were in the middle of something."
Julia sighed and rolled her eyes. Step one in talking to Isabelle McCray was always
to reassure her that you didn't mind talking to her. Which, by the time you were done,
you did.
"Mom. I'm not in the middle of anything. This is fine. In fact, it's the perfect time
for you to call. It absolutely could not be better."
"Well, now you sound irritated. I can call back."
Julia made a gun with her thumb and finger and mimed shooting herself in the head
with it, complete with tongue lolling out of her mouth in a portrayal of sudden, violent
death.
"Hey, Mom? Now that you mention it, I was in the middle of a thing for work. Why
don't we just—"
"I'm worried about your brother," Isabelle said, finally spitting out the purpose of
her call. "I was wondering if you'd heard from him."
"Drew?" she said stupidly, as though she had more than one brother.
"It's just … another one of those debt collectors called me this morning looking for
him. I never know what to say."
"Ah." Julia felt the press of tension at the center of her breastbone. She knew the
feeling well, especially in reference to her brother. "Just tell them what I tell them: 'No
one by that name resides at this address.' It's true."
"Well, I suppose."
Drew, who was younger than Julia by about a year, had been hounded by collections
agencies ever since his wife had maxed out their credit cards, emptied their bank
accounts, and removed approximately three-quarters of their belongings from their
apartment, leaving him to come home from work one evening to find a goodbye note and
gaping, blank spaces where their bed, large-screen TV, refrigerator, and sofa used to be.
She'd left the book collection, an old dresser from Ikea, and the kitchen table behind
—but no forwarding address.
"Could you call him and see if he's okay?" Isabelle said.
"You could call him yourself."
Isabelle let out a sigh. "You know I can't do that."
Julia began pacing over the hardwood floors, her socks making a swishing sound as
she went.
"Mom. When are you going to tell me what's going on between the two of you? I
can't help if I don't know what's happening."
Isabelle hesitated. "It's not my place to tell you, honey. And … I don't think you
could help even if you knew."
"God, Mom. This is so ridiculous."
Something had happened between Drew and their mother three years before, shortly
before their father had died of injuries suffered in a car accident. Whatever it was, it had
damaged their relationship to the point that Drew no longer spoke to their mother. When
Tessa, his wife, had left him a year and a half later, he had vanished from Bozeman
without even telling his mother where he'd gone.
Julia knew where he was living—they stayed in touch via phone and text—but he'd
forbidden her to tell their mother.
She resented the position that put her in. Drew asked her about their mother's wellbeing
but refused to communicate with her himself. And Isabelle used her to pass
messages to Drew, urging her to divulge his whereabouts.
Neither of them would budge on the subject of their falling-out, leaving Julia to
wonder what in the world had happened and how it could possibly have been bad enough
to keep a son from talking to his only surviving parent.
"Just … would you call him? There's something … I really think he might need your
support right now."
"But why?" Julia threw her free hand into the air in frustration. "Would you please
just tell me what the hell is going on?"
Isabelle was silent, and Julia could imagine her wringing her hands with worry.
"All right," she said finally. "All right. I'll call him."
And she was sure she would want to bang her head against a wall when she did.
Isabelle and Drew were both stubborn as hell. It was a wonder they didn't get along
better, since they were so much alike.
"And what about you, Mom? Are you okay?" Whatever had Isabelle so worried
about Drew had obviously taken a toll on her, as well. Julia could hear it in the tremor of
her voice.
"Just call him." Isabelle hung up the phone, leaving Julia more confused than ever
about how her family had abruptly disintegrated eighteen months ago, and how she
would ever manage to help heal the rift.
By the end of the day, Isabelle wasn't the only one worried about Drew.
Julia had tried to call him, but he hadn't picked up, so she'd left him a voice mail
message relaying their mother's concern and asking him to call back.
He didn't.
It was true that he'd become somewhat reclusive since he'd taken off from Bozeman
with his clothes, his car, and the few things Tessa had left him. Julia hadn't seen him in
person in all that time, because he'd made it clear that he needed his space. But he
usually returned her calls, even when they were made to relay a message from their
mother.
And it usually didn't take him all day, either.
She tried not to be too upset about Isabelle's cryptic expressions of concern, but it
was hard. Why was she suddenly worried about him—or, to be accurate, more worried
than usual? There'd been a tone in her voice—something distinctly different from the
typical martyr routine she used with Julia. Something fragile, like she might suddenly
shatter at the least bit of pressure.
Had something happened?
If it had, Isabelle certainly wouldn't tell Julia. Neither would Drew. As distant as
Isabelle and Drew had become from each other, they seemed to have formed a tight club
of secrecy and resentment, with Julia firmly on the outside.
Not that she wanted to belong to a club like that.
She went about her day and tried not to think about it. She began transferring her
sketches for the Bozeman hotel job to the CAD program on her laptop. She reluctantly
got dressed, including snow boots and gloves, and shoveled enough snow to get her car
out of the driveway.
She drove to the Safeway on Main Street to stock up on essentials like white wine,
hot cocoa, Pop Tarts, and Cap'n Crunch, and then brought her purchases home. She ate
lunch—a frozen burrito she heated up in the microwave—and put the plate in the
dishwasher.
With that done, she assessed the sorry state of her house and decided the laundry
couldn't wait any longer, as she was already on her last pair of clean underpants. She
threw in a load, and then thought that she might as well scrub the toilets while she was at
it.
She'd folded the clean laundry and was beginning to think about dinner, when she
realized Drew still hadn't called her back.
She plopped down onto her sofa with her cell phone and thought about what to do.
After a moment of consideration, she texted him:
I'm about to call you, and you'd damned well better pick up.
Julia waited until her screen showed that he'd read the message, and then she called.
"Jules." He sounded tired.
"I tried to call you this morning. More than seven hours ago. I left a message. Are
you screening my calls?"
He let out a sigh and didn't answer, and that was as good as a yes.
"Drew, jeez. What's going on? I get a phone call from Mom this morning, and she
sounds all quivery and upset, saying she's worried about you. And then you shut me out.
Like always. Is everything okay? And you'd better not give me some bullshit line just to
placate me, either."
"Jules, don't worry about it. I'm—"
"I said I don't want a bullshit line." She was using her bossy big sister voice, which
she had employed often and to good effect during their childhood.
"Okay. Something did happen, and I'm … a little thrown. But I'm not ready to talk
about it, and I promise that I'm going to be okay."
"You're going to be okay," she repeated. "Which means you're not okay now."
"Julia …"
"Something happened that Mom knows about, and that has the two of you upset, but
you won't talk to each other about it, and neither of you will talk to me." She neatly
summarized the events of the day, feeling hot tears coming to her eyes.
He didn't say anything.
"I'm your sister, Drew."
"I know you are."...
Those burning tears threatened to spill over as she seesawed between worry and
anger. She stood with one arm pressed tight across her chest, as though the defensive
posture could protect her from her hurt.
"You've changed." Her tone was accusing. "You and Mom both. At first I thought it
was grief over Dad, but it's not that. It's not. The anger and the silence and the secrets
…"
"Julia? You need to respect the fact that there are things I don't want to talk about,"
he said.
"Yeah. Sure. Right." She swiped at her eyes with the back of her hand. "And you
need to respect the fact that I used to have a family." Her voice broke. "I used to have a
brother and two parents, and … and we all loved each other, and we were here for each
other. And what do I have now, Drew? What do I have now?"
She hung up before he could answer, and then threw her cell phone onto the sofa,
where it bounced once before coming to rest.
It was a goddamned good thing she'd thought to buy beer and junk food. She was
going to need them.
She took the beer, along with a jumbo bag of Cheetos, over to Mike's house later
that evening, though she hadn't been invited and likely would be interrupting some
essential male function, like lounging in sweatpants and watching football highlights on
ESPN.Mike Norton, a rough-hewn, weathered guy in his midfifties who was the go-to
general contractor on Julia's biggest jobs, answered the door in sweatpants, just as she'd
predicted. But there was no TV noise coming from his living room—just the whine of the
smoke detector blaring throughout the small, 1950s-era house.
The smoke alarm was accompanied by the distinct smell of something burning and a
light haze of gray smoke.
"What the hell, Mike?" Julia pushed past him and into the house, carrying the beer in
one hand and the Cheetos in the other. She set the items down on the coffee table and
proceeded into the kitchen, waving one hand in front of her face as though that might be
an effective method of clearing the smoke from the air.
"Just let yourself right in," he said dryly, following behind her. "It's not like I was in
the middle of anything."
In the compact kitchen, she found a formerly frozen pizza sitting on the counter. The
edges of the crust were charred into a black and smoking ruin, and the forlorn little pieces
of pepperoni looked like some kind of irradiated debris from the surface of Mars.
Obviously, waving her hand around wasn't going to cut it. She heaved open the
window over the sink and began flapping a dish towel in the general direction of the
kitchen smoke detector.
"Jeez, you're opening a window?" he groused. "It's twenty degrees out there."
"It's either that or suffer from smoke inhalation."
They had to yell at each other to be heard over the screaming of the smoke alarm.
As Julia continued flapping the dish towel, to little effect, Mike pulled a step stool
out of a utility closet, climbed onto it, and disconnected the smoke alarm. The sudden,
blessed silence was sweet relief.
Mike climbed down from the step stool with the silent smoke detector in his hand,
and they both looked at the blackened pizza.
"You can build a gazebo big enough to seat twenty out of nothing but lumber and a
dream," Julia said, looking at him in wonder. "But you can't manage to cook a frozen
pizza at four hundred degrees for twenty minutes?"
"I guess I got distracted." He scratched the gray stubble on his chin. "Kinda forgot it
was in there."
"Distracted by what?" She grabbed a pair of oven mitts off the counter, picked up
the smoking, black pizza, and threw it into the garbage can sitting on the floor near the
refrigerator.
He shrugged, looking embarrassed. "I was on the phone with Emma."
Emma was Mike's ex-wife, whom he harbored great, persistent dreams of winning
back one day. The problem was, she had already remarried and moved to Arizona, where
she and her new husband had a house, complete with a swimming pool, a sunroom, and a
dog.
"Oh, Mike." Julia looked at him with equal measures of pity and scorn.
"Yeah, yeah." He waved her off. They'd had this conversation many times before—
the one where she told him he was wasting his time and doing unnameable damage to his
heart by refusing to move on—and they both knew that it wasn't going to do any good.
"Well." Julia let her shoulders sag in defeat. "What are you going to do about
dinner?" She changed the subject and gestured toward the trash can, which now smelled
like charcoal and burned cheese.
"I saw you brought Cheetos," he suggested.
Julia and Mike had a kind of routine they went through every time one of them
showed up at the other's house. If Mike was the one to come to Julia's place, he had to
pretend he was there to render some essential manly service out of paternal concern. He'd
grumble that somebody had to clean out her rain gutters, since there was no way she
would ever get around to doing it herself, and then, either while he was completing the
task or afterward, he would bring up whatever it was he'd come to talk about.
If Julia was the one to go to Mike's house, she had to pretend that she was there to
consult him on some question related to the landscaping business. There had to be some
kind of pretense that the visit was related to an important chore or work-related issue.
Otherwise, Julia would have to admit that she had no female friends, and Mike would
have to admit that he was lonely without his wife and wanted someone to talk to.
Since admitting those things would have required more introspection than either of
them was comfortable with, they danced around an awkward fact that was, nonetheless,
as true as the North Star: They were each other's best friend.
An outsider might have called the routine pointless or even absurd, but the two of
them had grown comfortable with it, and they relied on it like one would any other of
life's rituals, like brushing their teeth or drinking morning coffee.
"So, you didn't come here to bring me Cheetos," Mike said, stuffing a handful of the
bright orange snack food in his mouth. "Why did you come?"
"I wanted to find out what your schedule looks like in August."
"August," he repeated.
"Yeah. I'm bidding on that restaurant job."
"It's February," he pointed out.
"Of course it is."
They ate some more Cheetos and drank some of the beer she'd brought, and then she
launched into the real reason she'd come. "There's something going on with my mom
and Drew."
Mike took a swallow of beer to wash down the Cheetos. "This isn't exactly news,"
he informed her.
"Yes, but this is something different. My mom called me this morning and said she
was worried about Drew, but she wouldn't say why. Then I call him up, and he sounds
like hell. Really awful. Like maybe he's been awake for the past forty-eight hours, living
on coffee and cigarettes. Which would not be unprecedented for him. But he won't tell
me what's wrong. What am I supposed to do? What am I supposed to think?"
"You could stay out of it," Mike suggested. He was lying back in his La-Z-Boy, in
full recline mode. "Maybe try minding your own business for a change."
"I would!" She threw her hands into the air, forgetting that one of them was holding
a Cheeto. The orange corn nugget flew two feet to the left and landed beside her on a sofa
cushion. "I'm not the one who brought me into this, remember. My mom called me. I was
happy! I was just ... living my life! And now I can't just be happy and live my life,
because there's some big, mysterious thing going on with Drew. He might not want to
talk about it or even see me"—she let out a ragged breath, suddenly overcome by
emotion—"but I love him, Mike. And I want him to be okay."
"Of course you do." He put his chair into the upright position and leaned forward,
resting his elbows on his knees. "You know, kid, you're a good sister and a good
daughter." He looked at her pointedly. "But if they won't accept what you've got to give,
there's not a hell of a lot you can do."
It was uncharacteristically touchy-feely advice, coming from him, and so she felt
compelled to nod thoughtfully. As though there was even a rat's ass of a chance that she
was going to just walk away from her family's problems.
"I'll think about it, Mike," she said. "I really will."
"Ah, that's crap," he said mildly, leaning back in his chair again. "You're going to
do what you always do. You're going to piss and moan and feel bad, and then you're
going to obsess, then you're going to come back here and bitch about it again in a few
days."
"Probably," she admitted. She finished off her first beer. "Are you going to eat the
rest of those Cheetos?"