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Weather Girl(12)

Author:Rachel Lynn Solomon

He returns the salute. On him, it really is cute. “And you have a good morning, weather girl.”

5

FORECAST:

Some unwelcome introspection with a glimmer of hope on the horizon

A GOOD MORNING, it is not. Sunlight streams in through the window across from my bed, my blackout curtains shoved to the side. My head is pounding and my tongue is too large for my mouth and my throat feels like I swallowed a vacuum cleaner filter and washed it down with straight vinegar. It’s the most expensive hangover I’ve ever had.

I almost faint when I check the time on my phone. One o’clock in the afternoon on a Saturday, which means I slept through the equivalent of an entire morning shift. When I started this job, I relied on Tylenol PM to help me fall asleep and energy drinks to keep me awake. Now I maintain the same schedule on weekends, or at least very close to it.

Garrison never loved my semi-backward schedule, even if I did. I do miss the way he’d cuddle me when I woke up when it was still dark out, his warmth almost enough to keep me in bed. I haven’t cried about it for a couple weeks, and that feels like progress. The last time was when I was watching Netflix and The Crown popped up as “something you might be interested in,” and I started bawling because yes, not only was I interested in it, but we’d watched the entire series on his account. The idea that my own Netflix account didn’t know about my love of royal melodrama and therefore didn’t care about my breakup was, in that moment, unfathomably inconsiderate.

What I kept from him, the subject of our final fight, wasn’t a big thing—in fact, it was quite small. Thirty pills about the size of my pinky nail, my prescription refilled each month at the nearby Bartell Drugs. The bottle had fallen out of my purse in our rush to get our Halloween costumes ready. My depression was under control, manageable, the way it had been for years with the exception of a couple medication changes when side effects wouldn’t go away and a new therapist when I moved back to Seattle from Yakima. I take those pills every morning, just as I’m doing now, plodding over to the bathroom and opening up the medicine cabinet.

It was easier if he didn’t know. I didn’t want him drawing a connection between my mother and me, asking more questions about why my dad left and who my mother was dating this month.

What I needed to do was simple: prevent what happened with my parents. None of my exes had Garrison’s problem. They seemed perfectly content not knowing everything. They loved how upbeat, how positive I was, how I let them get out their anger while never airing any of mine. I was the cool girl, the easygoing girl, and I loved her. If I was upset about something, I journaled or rage-texted Alex. If they forgot an anniversary, I bought myself flowers. I was—am—bright sides and silver linings, and it’s always worked for me before.

If I insisted on being difficult, if I let any of the darkness out—well, then I’d end up like my mother.

“You can’t be sunshine all the time, Ari,” Garrison said during that fight, when his inflatable tube man costume had lost all its humor and lay flattened on a couch cushion. He didn’t understand. I lived in two realities, and he could only be in one of them with me. If I’ve learned anything from my mother, it’s that sunshine is the only way to make someone stay. “No one can.”

Funny, really, since I don’t like sunshine at all.

Determined to get myself back on schedule, I go to a yoga class and the farmers market, keeping myself busy by cooking an elaborate, too-expensive meal for one person. At the very least, I’ve discovered one great thing about living alone: I don’t have to hide from anyone.

By Sunday afternoon, my goal is to tire myself out so I can get to sleep as close to my regular bedtime of eight-thirty as possible. I ride for an hour on the cheap exercise bike I nearly broke my back hauling up the stairs. Then I hunch over my kitchen table, bending wire and stringing beads for a pair of chandelier earrings. It’s soothing, losing myself in this work for a couple hours. Once I’ve finished them, I light candles around my apartment, pull up some of my favorite videos in an incognito browser, and give myself two orgasms before my vibrator runs out of batteries and I can’t find any new ones, even after I turn my apartment upside-down and open every device. Apparently, nothing else uses triple–A.

Except when I crawl into bed, knowing I have to be up in six hours, I can’t sleep. Back when I was training my body for this, the more anxious I’d get about needing to go to sleep, the tougher it would be to fall asleep. I wasn’t lying to Russell—I really do love mornings, but I love them a little less when it’s nine o’clock, ten o’clock, ten thirty, and I have to be up in three and a half hours.

Eventually, I grab my laptop, pay $3.99 to rent an HD version of The Parent Trap, and drift off right around the time the British Lindsay Lohan flies to Napa Valley to meet Dennis Quaid for the first time.

* * *

? ? ?

MY ALARM GOES off at 2:30 and again at 2:40 and finally at 2:47, I force myself out of bed, force myself to be content with the couple hours of sleep I got, even if remembering the Emmy incident makes me want to hibernate for the rest of winter.

I throw my makeup into a bag and stumble out to my car, bleary-eyed. Sometimes I do my makeup at home and sometimes at work and sometimes while stopped at traffic lights, and today is a traffic light kind of day. I picked one of my favorite dresses to combat my exhaustion, a three-quarter-sleeve mulberry sheath paired with brown suede calf boots. I have five of this dress because the camera prefers rich colors and solids. No green, or I’d disappear into the weather map. Patterns can wobble and shake, which is bad news for the frightening amount of weather-themed clothing I’ve accumulated over the years.

I was never fully prepared for viewer comments about my clothes. It was shocking at first, people not just judging my appearance but outright rating my hotness. They usually score me the lowest when I wear pants. I hate that I’ve gotten used to it, but it’s a hazard of the job. My first couple years working full-time, I thought about what kinds of comments I’d get when I got dressed, but I haven’t since I started working in Seattle. If the trolls want to waste energy talking about it, that’s their choice. And it’s our choice to hit delete. There probably isn’t a piece of clothing I could wear that wouldn’t draw either scrutiny or a string of fire and/or eggplant emojis. It’s not worth it to dress for anyone but myself and, more importantly, the map.

After I drop my bag off at my desk, I make my way to the weather center, a cluster of computers in the studio we use mainly for forecasting, though sometimes we shoot in there, too. I check all my usual models and data, starting with the National Weather Service and the University of Washington, taking notes and crunching numbers before putting my own daily and seven-day forecasts together on one of our forecast sheets. This worksheet might seem basic, but it’s how meteorologists have been doing this job for years, and many of us still do it by hand. After I finish, I’ll start building the graphics viewers will see during the broadcast.

I yelp when I feel a hand on the back of my chair.

“Sorry,” Torrance says, and prior to Friday, I wouldn’t have been sure I’d ever heard her utter that word. “Can I talk to you?”

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