sat up, titillated. âMaybe he
raped
her. And she got pregnant and kept the baby.â
âLexie,â Trip said suddenly. He slid across the sofa and slung an arm over Pearlâs shoulders. âShut the fuck up.â For Trip to pay attention to a conversation that wasnât about sports, let alone tune in on someone elseâs feelings, was nothing short of unusual, and they all knew it.
Lexie rolled her eyes. âI was just
kidding,
â she said. âPearl knows that. Donât you, Pearl?â
âSure,â Pearl said. She forced herself to smile. âDuh.â She felt asudden rush of dampness beneath her arms, her heart pounding, and she wasnât sure if it was Tripâs arm around her shoulders, or Lexieâs comments, or both. Above them, somewhere overhead, Izzy practiced Lalo on her violin. On the screen, the two women leapt from their seats again and began to claw at each otherâs hair.
But Lexieâs comment rankled. It was nothing Pearl hadnât thought about herself over the years, but hearing it spoken aloud, from someone elseâs mouth, made it feel more urgent. She had wondered these things, now and again, but when sheâd asked as a child, her mother had given her flippant answers. âOh, I found you in the bargain bin at the Goodwill,â Mia had said once. Another time: âI picked you from a cabbage patch. Didnât you know?â As a teen, sheâd finally stopped asking. This afternoon, the question still churning in her mind, she got home and found her mother in the living room, applying paint to a photograph of a stripped-down bicycle.
âMom,â she began, then found she could not repeat Lexieâs blunt words. Instead she asked the question that ran below all the other questions like a deep underground river. âWas I wanted?â
âWanted where?â With one careful lick of the brush Mia supplied a Prussian-blue tire in the empty fork of the bike.
âHere. I mean, did you want me. When I was a baby.â
Mia said nothing for such a long time that Pearl wasnât sure if sheâd heard. But after a long pause, Mia turned around, paintbrush in hand, and to Pearlâs amazement, her motherâs eyes were wet. Could her mother be crying? Her unflappable, redoubtable, indomitable mother, whom she had never seen cry, not when the Rabbit had broken down by the side of the road and a man in a blue pickup had stopped as if to help, taken Miaâs purse, and driven away; not when sheâd dropped a heavy bedsteadâsalvaged from the side of the roadâon her baby toe, smashing it so hardthe nail eventually turned a deep eggplant and fell away. But there it was: an unfamiliar shimmer over her motherâs eyes, as if she were looking into rippled water.
âWere you wanted?â Mia said. âOh, yes. You were wanted. Very, very much.â
She set the paintbrush down in the tray and walked rapidly out of the room without looking at her daughter again, leaving Pearl to contemplate the half-finished bicycle, the question sheâd asked, the puddle of paint slowly forming a skin over the bristles of the brush.
5
A s if the Jerry Springer episode had awakened her to Pearlâs presence, Lexie began to take a new interest in her little brotherâs friendâLittle Orphan Pearl, she said to Serena Wong one evening on the phone. âSheâs so quiet,â Lexie marveled. âLike sheâs afraid to speak. And when you look at her, she turns bright redâred-red, like a tomato. A literal tomato.â
âSheâs super shy,â Serena said. Sheâd met Pearl a few times, at the Richardsonsâ, but hadnât yet heard her say a word. âShe probably just doesnât know how to make friends.â
âItâs more than that,â Lexie mused. âItâs like sheâs trying not to be seen. Like she wants to hide in plain
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