The Upside of Falling



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But maybe it wasn’t him.
It was, though.
It was him.
The next morning my head felt like it had been put in a blender. I woke up to


a text from my mom. She was at yoga, then going for lunch. She wouldn’t be
home for a few hours. Then it hit me like a ton of bricks. My mom. My mom,
who was in love with my dad. My mom, who had spent nearly twenty years of
her life with him. I realized that this wasn’t just about me. This could ruin her
too.
I decided then that I couldn’t tell her what I had seen. Not until I knew for
sure.
I needed answers.
I took a shower and called Becca. She picked up right away, probably still
worried about me. I remembered her voice in the darkness last night, reading to
me. I needed that again right now. That small sense of peace. That certainty.
“Can you come over?” I asked.
A half hour later my doorbell rang. Becca was standing on the porch,
hunched over. “Hi,” she said, out of breath.
“Becca—did you run here?”
She stepped inside, chest heaving. “Y-Yeah. It sounded urgent. Didn’t have a
ride. You good?”
I stared at her: hair sticking to her forehead, bent over like she was about to
pass out, mouth hanging open as she tried to catch her breath. This girl had
literally run across town to my house. She looked like she needed an ambulance,
yet the only thing she seemed to be worrying about was me. I hugged her,
wrapped her into my chest until my chin was resting on the top of her head. I felt
it then, the same feeling as last night, when she was reading to me. That stillness.
A break in the storm.
“Thank you,” I said.
I let go. She fixed her hair, cheeks flushed. “Yeah. Of course. What’s up?” I
led her to the kitchen. She kept glancing around. I thought she was admiring the
house at first—my mom went overboard with the decorating—but then I saw her
peeking through doorways and trying to look upstairs.
“No one’s home,” I told her.
She visibly relaxed.
We took a seat at the kitchen table. I got her two water bottles, just in case. “I
need your help,” I said when she’d nearly finished the first.
“Does this have to do with your dad?”
I nodded. “Read any books about detectives?”
Turned out that yeah, she had.
We started in his office. It felt weird being in there—my dad was pretty strict
on no one going inside. I looked around the room. Everything was organized.
The books in the shelves were in alphabetical order; the papers on the desk were


stacked in neat-edged piles. Everything looked polished and shiny. Becca went
right to his computer, saying something about checking his credit card history.
“The computer has a password,” she said, staring at the screen with her eyes
narrowed. “Any ideas?”
She was going all Nancy Drew. I was kind of into it.
I walked over and stood beside her. “Try my name.” She typed it in. The
password box shook and turned red. It was wrong. “Try Willa, my mom’s
name.” Again, no luck. We tried birthdays, anniversaries, names of pets my
parents used to have—nothing worked.
It was a dead end.
“What now?” I asked.
Becca rubbed her hands together, placed her chin on top. She was thinking
hard, chewing on her lips. I realized she did that a lot when she was deep in
thought. Even sometimes when she read.
I was staring at her mouth, kind of mesmerized, when she said, “We need to
check something that’s not on his computer. Do you know what time his flight
left yesterday? Brett?”
I cleared my throat. “Ten thirty.” She typed something into her phone. “Hey,
let me see,” I said, crouching to peer over her shoulder. She was on the airport’s
website, checking the flight records for anything out of Atlanta, Georgia, to
Columbus, Ohio. She kept tapping. Every time the screen reloaded, my chest
constricted. I couldn’t look anymore. I walked to the other side of the room and
sat on the couch, fingers crossed.
All I needed was a little hope. Some good news.
“Found it!” Becca ran to the couch and showed me the screen. There was a
flight to Columbus out of Atlanta and it left yesterday morning. At ten thirty.
It felt like my heart had just been connected to a defibrillator and given a
shock. It was beating again.
“That’s a good sign,” Becca said. “Maybe he really is in Ohio and that man
you saw last night was . . . someone else.”
“You really believe that?” I asked her.
She said yes, but the look on her face said otherwise.
“You’re not a very good liar, Becca.”
She sighed. “I’m sorry. I’m trying to stay hopeful. Do you know what hotel
he’s staying at? We can call and see if he checked in.”
That was a good idea. My dad usually stayed at the United Suites, the hotel
company he worked for, but I texted my mom to make sure. When she typed
back that same hotel, I looked up the phone number—luckily, there was only
one in Columbus—and Becca made the call.


The phone was ringing. My hands were trembling. I couldn’t stop bouncing
my foot against the floor.
“Hi,” Becca said. I almost fell off the couch. “I was wondering if you can see
if a guest checked in yesterday afternoon? The name is—” She looked at me,
eyebrows raised.
“Thomas,” I mouthed.
“Thomas Wells,” she finished. “Yeah, he’s my, uh, dad. He hasn’t been
answering his phone and we’re worried.” Becca was nodding along to whatever
the receptionist said. I leaned in closer, trying to hear. “It’s Thomas. Yeah, W-E-
L-L-S. Sure. I’m on hold,” she whispered. A second later, she said, “Oh. Okay.
Thanks anyway. Bye.”
She hung up.
“Well?”
I didn’t like the look on her face.
“She said there was no reservation under that name.”
It felt like the floor had turned to quicksand and I was being sucked under.
“Brett—” She reached for me. I walked away. Down the hall and up the
stairs until I was in my parents’ room. I searched through the closet. Checked
inside all his jacket pockets. Then the dresser drawers, the nightstands. There
was nothing there. No shady restaurant receipts. No perfume that smelled
nothing like my mom’s. Jesus Christ. It was dead end after dead end.
I was sitting on the floor when I heard the door creak open. Becca walked in,
looking a little uncomfortable. I think I may have been crying, because I was sort
of seeing two of her instead of one.
“You know,” she said, kneeling on the floor beside me and sitting down,
“when my parents got divorced, I felt like this too. I kept searching for answers
like their marriage was some puzzle and all I needed was to find the right pieces.
I obsessed over it for years, wondering why my dad left and what moment he
realized he didn’t want us anymore. Was it during dinner one night? Was there a
fight I don’t know about? Did he just stop loving my mom? There are so many
questions and I’m still looking for the answers, Brett. Even now. I mean”—she
started laughing—“I show up at his house sometimes and I just stand there like a
complete weirdo! Staring and waiting! I even went inside last week and talked to
his wife! And the worst part is, I don’t even know what I’m waiting for. I just
stand there and hope that the day will come when I won’t have to. When I won’t
feel like this anymore.
“And some days are better. Like when we were at the arcade eating jelly
bells. Or when I’m at the bakery with my mom and Cassie. In those moments,
it’s like the life we used to have with my dad was from another lifetime. And


I’m happy with it being just my mom and me. But there are days when it sucks.
Days when I obsess over him and overanalyze every little thing until I realize it’s
pointless. People leave, Brett. It’s not our fault for not giving them a reason to
stay. It’s their fault for not finding one. You know?”
No. I didn’t know. Because up until this moment my life had been contained
in this perfect little bubble: perfect house, perfect football career, perfect family
—everything was so damn perfect. Too perfect. And now there were dents.
Cracks. And I kept thinking back to the way my mom looked during dinner
when she dropped that glass of wine. And the night when I found her in her
bedroom crying after my dad left for New York. Or the morning he came back
and she stood there on the porch, not saying a word. And I felt like a complete
idiot for not realizing that being perfect was just a facade. An act. That if you
pulled back the curtain, there was a whole lot of shit hiding behind it.
“My dad’s having an affair.” I whispered the words, like maybe if I said it
low enough it would make it less true.
“Yeah,” Becca said. Her hand slid across the floor and grabbed on to mine.
“He is.”


Becca
WHEN IN DOUBT, RETURN TO
the trusty pro-con list.
I made myself at home in Brett’s bedroom. Which is probably one of the
weirder places I’ve been this year. Weeks ago, if someone told me I’d be
spending my Saturday afternoon sitting on Brett Wells’s bed, I would have
laughed in their face.
Once Brett dug out a notebook and pen from his desk drawer, I went to town.
I drew a line down the center of the page and wrote PROS on one side and
CONS on the other. The list was to decide whether or not it was a good idea to
tell his mom about his dad’s affair. Or, on a heavier note, possible multiple
affairs.
Brett was sitting at his desk chair, his head still in his hands. It was
physically painful for me to see him like this and not know what to do to help
him. I of all people should know some magical word to ease the pain at least
momentarily. But nope. I had nothing. Nada. His world was falling apart and the
only solution my brain could conjure up was a dumb list.
It was quite literally all we had. The pressure was on.
I tapped the pen against my knee, thinking out loud. “A con could be that
there’s always the slim chance it wasn’t your dad we saw.” Brett made a noise,
almost a snort, and didn’t look up. “Maybe telling your mom will do more harm
than good. Like she’d prefer to not know instead of everything changing with the
truth. Ignorance is bliss and all that.”
“That would make two of us,” Brett mumbled.
I filled in the CON side of the list with the two bullets.
“Pro would be that you don’t have to keep a secret from your mom and that
she deserves to know the truth. I’d want to know if it were me.”
Brett stood up. “This is ridiculous, Becca. We’re seriously using a list to


figure out whether we should break my mom’s heart?”
I gripped the notebook a little tighter. “They help me make decisions.”
“But it’s not helping me,” he said, storming out of the room.
I hated this. Feeling like there was nothing I could say or do that would make
this easier on him. But there had to be something. This wasn’t some book I was
reading, where the future was already planned out. I still had a chance to change
Brett’s story. So what was I going to do?
I had an idea. It was there, in the back of my mind. I kept thinking about last
night, when Brett said he wanted to be distracted, that it would help him process.
And I had the perfect distraction. But it was personal. Like, very personal. And it
was one of the things I wrote on my own pro-con list about dating Brett—the
one con that scared me the most.
I tried to put everything into perspective. Brett was going through a lot right
now, and I knew exactly what having your world turned upside down felt like.
And I wished I would have let someone help me through it instead of bottling all
my emotions up. Maybe then I’d be better now, more in the present instead of
stuck in the past. That was five years ago. I couldn’t go back and rewrite my
own story. But Brett’s was happening right now. And if there was a slim chance
I could help him, even for one night, wasn’t it worth it?
I crossed the list out on the page. Then I put the notebook down on the desk
and followed Brett downstairs. I found him sitting on the couch, staring up at the
ceiling. “Hey,” I said, sitting beside him. He hadn’t smiled all day.
Brett brushed his fingers against mine. “Sorry for getting mad,” he said.
“This is a lot. It’s like everything I thought about my life, my parents, their
marriage, was all a lie. I want to call my dad right now and ask him. I want
answers. But the thought of having them is terrifying, Becca. What am I
supposed to do?”
His eyes were red, staring into mine. I realized he’d run out of the room to
cry.
“The thing is,” I said, “you don’t have to do anything right now. I know it
seems like life or death, but all of this weight will still be there tomorrow, Brett.
You can make a decision then. Tonight, you should come to my house for
dinner.” I paused. Forced the words out. “With me and my mom.”
“I thought you didn’t want your mom to know about us?”
“I don’t. I really don’t. But you need a change of scenery right now. Being in
this house is not helping you.”
“You’d really do that for me?” he asked. It made me sad that he sounded
surprised.
“Of course.” How bad could Brett fiasco number two really be?


Brett rested his head against mine, exhaling a long breath.
“You’re the best girlfriend I never had, Becca Hart.”
Saying I was nervous for this dinner would be an understatement. I was
visibly freaking out. My feet were tapping against the elevator floor, and I swear
this thing was moving faster than normal because suddenly the doors were
opening and we were standing in front of my apartment.
“Remember,” I whispered to Brett, “no talking about fake anything. Got it?”
He still wasn’t giving me that ultra-Brett smile, but his lips twitched a little.
It was a start.
“Got it.”
With my heart somewhere in my stomach, I knocked.
“Don’t you have keys to your house?” Brett asked.
Of course I had keys to my house. I was just too nervous to remember.
Dammit. I grabbed them from my pocket and had the key in the lock as soon as
the door pulled open. My mom looked at me, then Brett, then back to me about a
thousand times. I swear it happened in slow motion. Every agonizing second
ticked by and I saw the exact moment the realization hit her.
“This is a surprise,” she said, tucking her hair behind her ears.
“Mom,” I said, giving her the please-do-not-embarrass-me look, “you
remember Brett. My”—c’mon, Becca. Spit it out—“boyfriend.”
She gasped, hand flying over her mouth and everything.
One second in and the regret was oh so present.
“Brett! From the bakery! You’re the one who made Bells drop all of the
cannoli—”
“Thanks for bringing that up, Mom.”
“—of course I remember you, dear. Come on in.”
“It’s nice to meet you, Ms. Hart,” Brett said, kind as ever. Then he gave her
The Smile. She was a goner.
Good god, mother. And I thought I was the one who had to keep it together.
“You can call me Amy, hon. I wish Becca would have told me we were
having a guest for dinner,” my mom said, casting me a not-so-subtle glare. “I
would have made something fancier than hamburgers.”
“Hamburgers are fine, Mom. That’s his favorite anyway.”
“They are?” she asked, gesturing for the two of us to step inside.
“Yeah.” Brett turned to me, eyebrows drawn together. “I didn’t think you
remembered that.”
I shrugged, moved my hair in front of my shoulders to block my stupid
cheeks, which felt as hot as the sun. Thankfully, my mom led us into the kitchen
then and the attention was taken off my ability to memorize random facts about


Brett. The air smelled like grease and meat instead of its usual warm vanilla
scent. My mom ran to the stove and was juggling two trays in her hands. “Have
a seat, you two. It’ll just be another minute.”
I sat down while Brett walked to my mom’s side and shut the door to the
oven. Total butt kisser. She was eyeing him like she was trying to visually
measure what size tux he’d wear for our wedding. I hoped Brett didn’t notice. Or
see the thumbs-up she gave me when he had his back turned.
This was going to be a long night.
When we were all seated and my mom seemed to get over her initial shock,
she said, “So, when did this happen? Becca kept telling me that you two were
only friends.”
“A few weeks ago,” Brett said.
I coughed. Really, really loud.
Brett stopped pilling fries on his plate to give me a confused look.
“What Brett means,” I said, doing damage control, “is that we’ve been
talking for a few weeks, as friends, and we just recently started dating. Right,
Brett?”
“Yes. Exactly.” Then he shoved a handful of fries in his mouth. Good. Now
he couldn’t talk and mess all this up.
Thankfully my mom had her love blinders on and didn’t notice the slipup.
She was grinning at the two of us like a weirdo. And for once I was thankful
Brett ate so damn fast. At least this dinner would be over soon.
The tour I gave Brett of our apartment ended in my bedroom. It was funny: I
started the day off in his bedroom and now we were in mine.
And by funny I meant severely nerve-racking.
His eyes instantly locked on the wall that was floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. I
had it color coordinated. I was very proud.
“You’ve read all of these?” he asked.
“Most more than once,” I said.
I sat on the middle of my bed and folded my hands in my lap. I felt very
awkward. Not in an uncomfortable way. More in a this-is-the-first-time-a-boy-
has-been-in-my-room kind of way. The butterflies were back, flapping away in
my stomach.
Brett’s gaze went from the books to the posters covering my yellow walls.
They were mostly bands I listened to when I was younger or posters from some
of my favorite books that had been made into movies. For the record, the book
was always better.
“Your room is nice,” he said, sitting on the edge of my bed. “Exactly what I
was expecting.”


“And by that you mean you were expecting to see a lot of books.”
“Pretty much. Yeah.” Brett laughed and I gasped, pointing my finger at him.
“You laughed!”
“So?”
“You haven’t laughed all day. I’ve been waiting for it.”
He watched me for a moment with a crease between his brows before turning
to the photo on my nightstand. It was my mom and me hugging. It was so sunny
outside that day that you could barely even see our faces with the glare.
Brett picked up the photo. “When’s this from?” he asked.
“My thirteenth birthday party. That was back when my mom was a horrible
cook. She made my birthday cake that year with salt instead of sugar. It was
disgusting. No one ate it. We took that picture right before the sun set.”
“Was that your favorite birthday?”
“No,” I said. “It was the first one without my dad.” I grabbed the frame from
his hands and gently placed it back on the nightstand.
Brett scooted across the bed, moving a little closer until his back was against
the headboard. “You were right about getting out of my house. Being here with
you and your mom worked. I feel better. It kind of makes everything else shrink
a little bit.”
“You can come over whenever,” I said. “I know my mom would love that.
You could move in if you want. She’d probably be fine with me having a
roommate.”
He laughed again. “She’s a little overenthusiastic, huh?”
“She just wants me to be happy. I think, after the divorce, she was worried it
had ruined me or something. That I’d turn into this emotionless robot that
doesn’t believe in love and spends the rest of her life alone with a few dozen
cats.”
“But you don’t believe in love.”

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