Kristan Higgins

Now That You Mention It


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me, you’ll want to go,” Poe said.

      “Why?”

      “It’s work,” my mother said. But her cheeks flushed.

      Now that was odd. My mother never blushed. Ever. Nothing embarrassed her. Once, when I was in high school and Mom was in the throes of a particularly gruesome menopause (or meno-go, as the case was), she’d bled so much at the grocery store that she left a red trail in her wake. She’d opened a package of paper towels, cleaned up and added an economy-size box of adult diapers to our cart. Didn’t so much as flinch.

      So her blushing now... Was this one of those sex-toy parties? “What kind of work?” I asked.

      “It’s a new venture,” she said, putting Tweety in the cage. At least there was that.

      “What kind of new venture?”

      “Nora, just get upstairs,” she growled.

      “It’s hug therapy,” Poe said.

      I snorted. No one else cracked a smile. “Seriously?” No answer. “Mom, if you need a hug, I’m right here.” I tried to remember our last hug. Failed.

      “I give the hugs, Nora. I don’t get them.”

      “Really?”

      “People pay for it,” Poe said.

      “Like prostitution?”

      My mother frowned. “It’s a recognized therapy—”

      “Recognized by whom?”

      “—and people are pathetic and will pay for just about anything,” my mother said.

      “That’s beautiful.”

      “And sometimes, they take a nap here.”

      “Are you kidding me?”

      “Just fix your face and get upstairs. Take your dog with you.”

      “Don’t you want him for pet therapy? Which is actually a recognized therapy?”

      “Nora, get.”

      I glanced at Poe, who, for once, made eye contact. “Does she turn into a pillar of salt when someone touches her?” I asked. “Get!” my mother said, her face redder now.

      Boomer raced up the stairs, then back down, then up again as I hobbled up the stairs. Rather than going into our room, I paused. “Let’s spy,” I suggested.

      “It’s gross,” Poe said.

      “All the better.”

      I stationed myself just off to the side of the stairs, where I was hidden but could peek. Poe went into our room and emerged with the pink velour beanbag chair, sat in it, then looked at me. She sighed, hauled herself out and shoved it my way.

      “You’re a good kid,” I whispered.

      She rolled her eyes.

      “So Gran does this every week?” I asked.

      “Just in the last month.”

      A few minutes later, there was a knock on the door. “Hello there, Hazel,” Mom said. “Bawb. Jawn.”

      Who were Bob and John? I peeked down. Holy crap! There were eight or nine people there. For hugs! From my mother!

      “How much does she charge?” I whispered.

      “Twenty bucks,” Poe whispered. She almost smiled.

      My mother was about to make almost two hundred dollars giving hugs? Huh. Maybe she was onto something.

      “You’re all very welcome here,” she said. Holy crap, there was Amy, who’d dated Sullivan Fletcher in high school! She needed a hug from my mother? And Mrs. Downs, who had the best example of resting bitch face I’d ever seen. I worried for my mother; Mrs. Downs seemed like the type to bite the head off a baby polar bear and eat it. Mr. Dobbins, the first selectman of Scupper Island for the past twenty years. A widower, if I wasn’t mistaken.

      A thought occurred to me.

      My mother needed a man.

      “Does Gran have a special someone?” I whispered to Poe.

      “A what?”

      “A boyfriend?”

      “Oh, Jesus, Nora. No.”

      “I think we should find her one.”

      Poe’s phone buzzed, and she stood up and went into our room, closing the door. I guess we weren’t going to bond over making fun of hug therapy.

      I sighed, then turned my attention back downstairs. This was the same spot where Lily and I would spy from on Christmas Eve, waiting for Santa Claus to come. We never did manage to stay awake.

      A yearning for my sister squeezed me so hard I couldn’t breathe for a second. My skinny little sister of the milky-white skin and big blue eyes, who used to always be so affectionate, always touching me in some way—snuggled at my side or holding my hand or with her arm around my shoulders, her sweet, sleepy smell that made my heart swell with love every time.

      Lily. My little flower.

      How had we lost that? How had so many years passed without us being close?

      My mom started talking, jolting me out of my memories.

      “Welp, you’re all here for hug therapy, so let’s get stahted.” Mom’s accent thickened. “Amy, sweethaht, ovah heah.” I saw slim legs clad in skinny jeans and ballet flats make their way over to my mother’s sturdy Naturalizers. I tilted my head down, making my collarbone flare with pain, but I had to see.

      Yes. My mother was hugging a human. It was a long hug, too. “You’re a good person,” she said. “You’re a nice girl.”

      Actually, Amy had been a raging bitch—Queen of the Cheetos—who’d made my mother’s daughter utterly wretched, but hey. Maybe people changed. Probably not, but still.

      They were still hugging. Amy was getting more affection in this hug than I’d gotten from my mother in the past twenty years. Was I jealous? You bet your life I was.

      “What’s her deal?” I whispered to the dog. He didn’t know, either.

      Mom released her, and Amy sniffled and moved toward the kitchen.

      Next up was Mr. Dobbins. “Bawb. You’re a good man. You have a good haht.” He bent down to hug my sturdy mother, and she hugged him tenderly, firmly.

      This was really freaky. Maybe it was the Vicodin. Maybe I should cough up twenty bucks and get a hug, too.

      I looked at Boomer, who lowered his head to lick my hand. Nah. Who needed a mother when I had the male version of Nana from Peter Pan? Plus, I was pretty sure that somewhere in the mother’s handbook, it said your kids shouldn’t have to bribe you to get hugged.

      My mother moved through the crowd, hugging people and telling them nice things. I pulled my phone out of my pocket and texted Roseline that I was either hallucinating on painkillers, or my mother was offering hugs for twenty dollars apiece in our living room.

      Video or it didn’t happen, was her answer.

      Mr. Dobbins came back for another.

      Yep. My mother needed a man. It seemed very clear. Maybe this was for her sake, too. Alone all these years (Hello, guilt, how’ve you been?). And since I was here on the island for the summer, I might as well find her someone. Why not, right? Another text to Roseline. Am going to find my mother a boyfriend.

      Don’t make rash decisions while on powerful narcotics, she responded. Go to bed.

      I was pretty dizzy. And while I did want to see my mother tuck some people in with blankies on our old couch and chairs, I also knew I was too jealous to watch.