“I won’t be gone long,” Vera promises. “The library will call me patriotic. All will be fine.”
Mama only nods. They both know it is a fiction, this promise of Vera’s, but they say nothing. Both of them want to believe.
Twenty
I think that is enough for tonight,” Mom said.
Meredith was the first to stand. Moving almost cautiously, she crossed the small, carpeted space and stood beside Mom. “You don’t look as tired tonight.”
“Acceptance,” Mom said, staring down at her own hands.
The unexpected answer brought Nina to her feet. She moved in beside her sister. “What do you mean by that?”
“You were right, Nina. Your father made me promise to tell you this story. I did not want to. And fighting a thing tires you out.”
“Is that why you went so . . . crazy after Dad died?” Meredith asked. “Because you were ignoring his wishes?”
“That is perhaps one of the reasons,” her mother said, giving a little shrug, as if to say that reasons didn’t matter much.
Nina and Meredith stood there a moment longer, but whatever slim strand of intimacy had been created tonight was gone now. Again, Mom would barely make eye contact with them.
“Okay,” Meredith finally said. “We’ll come get you in the morning for breakfast.”
“I do not want—”
“We do,” Nina said in a voice that silenced her mother’s protest. “Tomorrow the three of us are going to be together. You can discuss it or argue or yell at me, but you know that I won’t change my mind and in the end I’ll get my way.”
“She’s right,” Meredith said, smiling. “She’s a bitch when she doesn’t get her way.”
“How would we know?” Mom said.
“Was that a joke?” Nina said, grinning.
It was like seeing the sun for the first time or riding your first two-wheeler. The whole world suddenly brightened.
“Go away,” Mom said, but Nina could tell that she was trying not to smile with them, and just that little change gave Nina wings.
“Come on, big sis,” she said, slinging an arm around Meredith.
They left Mom’s stateroom for their own room.
Their long, narrow room was surprisingly spacious. There was a small sitting area—a love seat that could be made into a bed—a coffee table, a television, and two twin beds. A pair of sliding doors led to their private veranda. Nina turned on the television, which showed the ship’s progress on a nautical map. There was no cell phone or Internet service out here in the waters off British Columbia, and no television programming. If they wanted to watch a movie, they needed to borrow one from the ship’s library.
“Dibs on the bathroom,” Meredith said as soon as they closed the door behind them, and Nina couldn’t help laughing. It was a sentence straight from their youth.
Meredith is on my side, Dad, tell her to scoot over.
Nina broke my rock ’em sock ’em robot on purpose.
Don’t make me stop this car, you two.
Nina couldn’t help smiling at that last one. When Meredith came out of the bathroom, looking squeaky clean and ready for bed in her pink flannel pajamas, Nina took her turn and got ready for bed. For the first time in years, she and her sister ended up in side-by-side twin beds.
“You’re smiling,” Meredith said.
“I was just thinking about our camping trips.”
“ ‘ Don’t make me stop this car.’ ” Meredith said, and they both laughed. For a magical moment, the years fell away and they were kids again, fighting over an inch of space in the backseat of a bright red Cadillac convertible, with John Denver singing about being high in the mountains.
“Mom never joined in,” Meredith said, her smile fading.
“How did she stay so quiet?”
“I always thought it was because she didn’t give a shit, but now I wonder. Dad was right: the fairy tale is changing everything.”
Nina nodded and leaned back. “The picture,” she said after a moment. “It’s Anya and Leo, right?”
“Probably.”
Nina turned to look at her sister. The question that had been beside them all night, gathering weight and mass, was close now, impossible to ignore. “If Mom really is Vera,” she said slowly, “what happened to her children?”
Nina had been all over the world, but rarely had she seen scenery to rival the magnificence of the Inside Passage. The water was a deep, mysterious blue, and there were islands everywhere—rough, forested hillocks of land that looked exactly as they had two hundred years ago. Behind it all were rugged, snow-draped mountains.
She had come out early this morning and been rewarded with breathtaking shots of dawn breaking across the water. She caught an orca breaching off the bow of the ship, its giant black and white body a stark contrast to the bronzed early morning sky.
She finally stopped shooting at about seven-thirty. By then her hands were frozen and her teeth were chattering so hard it was difficult to keep the camera steady.
“Would you like some hot chocolate, ma’am?”
Nina turned away from the railing and the exquisite view, and found a fresh-faced young deck steward holding a tray of cups and a thermos of hot chocolate. It sounded so good she didn’t even mind that the girl had called her ma’am. “That would be great. Thanks.”