my mom getting a bigger car?”
“She drives a minivan. How big of a car does she need?”
“Not Nana,” Diem says. “My mom. Skylar said my mom never comes
to
my T-ball games, and I told her she will when she gets a bigger car.”
I stop wiping her hands. She never brings up her mother. This is twice
in one day we’ve brushed the conversation.
I guess she’s getting to that age, but
I have no idea what Grace or
Patrick has told her about Kenna, and I have absolutely no idea why she’s
asking about her mother’s car.
“Who told you your mom needed a bigger car?”
“Nana. She said my mom’s car isn’t big enough and that’s why I live
with her and NoNo.”
That’s confusing. I shake my head and throw the wipes in a sack. “I
don’t know. Ask your nana.” I close her door and text Grace as I’m circling
around to the driver’s side of my truck.
Why does Diem think her mother isn’t in her life because
she needs a bigger car?
We’re a few miles away from McDonald’s when Grace calls. I make
sure not to answer it on speaker. “Hey. Diem and I are on our way back.”
It’s my way of letting Grace know I can’t say much on my end.
Grace sucks in a breath like she’s getting ready for a long explanation
to my text. “Okay, so last week, Diem asked me why she doesn’t live with
her mother. I didn’t know what to say, so
I told her she lives with me
because her mother’s car isn’t big enough to fit all of us. It was the first lie I
could come up with. I panicked, Ledger.”
“I’d say so.”
“We plan on telling her, but how do you tell a child her mother went to
prison? She doesn’t even know what prison is.”
“I’m not judging,” I say. “I just want to make sure we’re on the same
page. We should probably come up with a
more accurate version of the
truth, though.”
“I know. She’s just so young.”
“She’s starting to get curious.”
“I know. Just . . . if she asks again, tell her I’ll explain it to her.”
“I did. Prepare for questions.”
“Great,” she says with a sigh. “How did the game go?”
“Good. She wore the red boots.
And got McDonald’s.”
Grace laughs. “You’re a sucker.”
“Yeah. Tell me something new. See you soon.”
I end the call and
glance into the back seat. Diem’s face is full of concentration.
“What are you thinking, D?”
“I
want to be in a movie,” Diem says.
“Oh yeah? You want to be an actress?”
“No, I want to be in a movie.”
“I know. That’s called being an actress.”
“Then, yeah, that’s what I want to be. An actress. I want to be in
cartoons.”
I don’t tell her cartoons are just voices and drawings. “I think you’d be
a great cartoon actress.”
“I will be. I’m gonna be a horse or a dragon or a mermaid.”
“Or a unicorn,” I suggest.
She grins and looks out her window.
I love her imagination, but she definitely didn’t get it from Scotty. His
mind was more concrete than a sidewalk.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
KENNA
I’ve never seen a picture of Diem. I don’t know if she looks like me or
Scotty. Are her eyes blue or brown? Is her smile honest like her father’s?
Does she laugh like me?
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