“Hey! I’m Josh, your resident advisor! You’re—” He glances at the remaining name tag. “You’re Jack!” He scans my face and my parents. “There’s been a reassignment! Not sure if you knew. Well, there’s always a long waiting list for first semester, so they’ll be giving us the name of your new roommate shortly. Had you connected with your first assignment?”
How much does he know? Maybe it isn’t only high schoolers who think freak accidents are contagious.
“Yeah,” I say. “I knew Finn. He’s dead. This is my mom and dad.”
These words seem to activate his RA training, and he launches into a speech about how happy he is to have me on his floor and all the good clean fun the dormitory will provide for its residents. I open the door and claim the bed and desk farthest from the hallway.
So much for college helping me move on.
It isn’t long before Mom and Dad are able to extract themselves. It’s a madhouse in the hallway, and Josh didn’t seem anxious to get to know me in particular.
Mom starts putting sheets on the bed. Dad stands in the center of the room with the two suitcases he carried, awaiting instructions.
“Get the TV, George,” Mom says without looking up.
“What TV?” I ask.
Dad hightails it out.
Mom pauses before smoothing the sheets. “I forgot to tell you. Mr. Smith came by a few days ago while you were out running. He’d bought a TV for Finn as a moving-in present. He thought you should have it.” She picks up the pillow and an empty pillowcase before glancing at me for my reaction.
I don’t know what to feel about this.
“He said something about wishing he could’ve known Finn better. I told him a few stories and how he was the most polite and helpful friend that any of you children had ever brought home. I knew he really wanted to talk to you. But he didn’t ask me.” Mom finishes fluffing the pillow. “And because he didn’t ask, I let him leave the television set.”
“I don’t want to talk to him,” I decide.
“I know, sweetie,” she says.
Dad has returned lugging the TV. It is big enough to be almost alarming. A classic Finn’s dad gesture.
“Why does he do things like that?” I asked Finn after he received a letter stating that a large savings bond had been taken out in his name. We’d finished a run, and he’d checked the mailbox as we headed inside. A drop of his sweat had dripped onto the paper.
“Proof of something,” Finn said. “I haven’t figured out what yet.”
Inside, he tossed the letter on the dining room table where it was immediately lost among his mother’s half-finished art projects. A bit over a year later, his dad invited him to Thanksgiving dinner at his house, and I was afraid that his heart would be broken, and I was right.
It’s a tight fit, but Dad and I manage to balance the TV on the top of the dresser. It dominates the upper half of the wall like a black hole. I turn my back on it and start to set up my desk.
When no one else has arrived by the time Mom and Dad want to go to dinner, part of me hopes that the RA was wrong about there being a waiting list for campus housing.
Part of the reason that my parents are still married to each other is because they are creatures of habit, so there is no discussion of where we will eat. We go to the same Chinese restaurant with the indoor fountain and six-foot-tall foo dogs that we eat at every time we’ve visited one of my brothers. Last time I was here, I was annoyed by my parents’ inability to change things up, but right now, the familiarity feels comforting.
The meal with my parents is like the ride down, better than I expected, even with both of them there. We talk about the time Chris dared me to jump into the fountain and Matt asking for the waitress’s number and being so surprised that she gave it to him that he was too scared to call.
They don’t bicker at all. In fact, midway through the meal, I set a timer on my phone, and they break their previous record for not arguing by a full fourteen minutes, making it all the way out to the parking lot before disagreeing about who would drive back. I text the news to the younger half of my brothers, who think my timer is amusing, unlike the older three, who think it’s disrespectful.
I tell Mom and Dad not to walk me back up to my room. They need to leave soon if they want to get home before midnight. Dad idles the car while Mom gets out to hug me. It’s more of a squeeze than a hug, and I’m wondering if I should, for their sake, let them walk me up when Mom lets go and holds my shoulders. She looks me in the eyes and doesn’t say anything, then nods to herself before stepping back and smiling at me.