Mother of All Secrets
Kathleen M. Willett
How do you like Mother’s friends? Do you think they’re pretty?
—Daisy Buchanan, The Great Gatsby
Prologue
Tuesday, October 13
I’m running, or trying to, at least—staggering along, wheezing, fighting to get as far away from that house as quickly as possible.
I used to love running, but I haven’t even considered trying since having Clara. And I certainly didn’t expect circumstances like these, in which I would need to.
But here I am.
There are a few people on the street; it’s late, but it’s New York, so there are always people. I hope I just seem like a jogger exercising at a slightly odd time and not someone fleeing a horrific scene that I won’t ever be able to erase or unsee. I pray the people I pass can’t see the blood, that the darkness of both the night and my clothing will protect me and my secrets. All of them.
I have no idea where to go. I’m only a few blocks from my own apartment, but going home isn’t an option. I can’t see my husband and baby right now. Can’t risk catching a glimpse of myself in the mirror, either. I’m scared of the woman who would be looking back at me.
I just need to keep moving until I figure out what the hell to do.
The problem is that the me who agreed to do what we’ve done isn’t really me. Not that I could tell you who that is. I haven’t been me for months. I’ve been an exhausted, overwhelmed, depressed woman I don’t even recognize. And this woman agreed to commit a violent crime. But she isn’t me.
There were so many holes in the plan. Why couldn’t I see them?
And now I’m going to lose everything. Clara. My sweet girl. What will you do without your mommy? What will I do without you? A life without you is no life at all. No matter how hard the past few months have been, I have never once doubted that I love you more than anything.
And even if we somehow get away with it—somehow, by some miracle—I’ll never really be me again, because I will always be able to truthfully say: we killed someone.
We killed someone.
We killed someone.
Chapter One
Thursday, October 1
Screams woke me, as they had every night (and morning, and afternoon) for the past eighty-six days. Immediately, my heart started pounding. Despite eighty-six days of practice, I still wasn’t used to being yanked from sleep by shrieks. There was something so violent, so merciless about it, like it was some kind of military training drill I was being forced to undergo. Except this wasn’t a drill—it was my life, and there was no end to it in sight. I felt fairly certain I would never sleep again.
I looked to my left and could just make out the slow rise and fall of Tim’s shoulder blade. Could he honestly be sleeping through this? I wondered with an anger that surprised even me a little bit. Seriously? I checked my phone for the time, hoping it was at least 2:00 a.m. That would mean that I had been sleeping for nearly three hours. That maybe I’d feel okay tomorrow, even if the rest of the night was a disaster. Three hours was pretty good. But, predictably, I had no such luck. It was 11:53 p.m. Great. I had been sleeping for a glorious, blissful forty-five minutes.
I sighed as loudly as possible and made no effort to quiet my movements as I rose from tangled sheets, inadvertently kicking off a dirty towel as I did. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d changed our sheets and properly made our bed. There was a distinct sour breast milk odor clinging to our room.
Tim stirred—finally—and mumbled, “You need anything?”
What I needed was to go somewhere remote and sleep for a week straight. To shower more than twice a week. To look in the mirror and actually recognize my reflection, to see me, Jenn, rather than the swollen, grumpy, leaky ghost of who I once was. To think about something other than this now eleven-pound alien who had taken over our home and lives. Better yet, for my husband to miraculously start lactating.
What I said instead of all these things, huffily, was “No. I got her.”
I walked over to Clara’s nook. She slept in our bedroom—our tiny apartment only had one bedroom—but we had her partitioned off to maintain some semblance of separation. Apparently, a little distance between the baby and the mom was important for longer sleep stretches. I’d read on a lactation website that “babies can smell the milk” and she would never stop crying if she knew I was near. “Jenn, get that baby out of your room as quickly as possible,” my sister-in-law, too, had advised me enthusiastically. “As soon as we moved Tyler to his crib in his own room, he started sleeping through the night immediately!” But she wasn’t exactly in the trenches with me: they lived in Connecticut in a huge house, and her kids were in middle school now. I didn’t remind her that we didn’t really have anywhere to move Clara, but I did order collapsible room dividers from Amazon that same afternoon, recharged with hope that this would be a game changer. So far, providing her with a makeshift cubicle had made no difference. At three months old, Clara had not slept more than three hours straight, and even three-hour stretches were a rare treat. Of course, that meant I hadn’t slept more than three hours, either.