Home > This Train Is Being Held(21)

This Train Is Being Held(21)
Author: Ismee Williams

“Sorry, we haven’t gotten around to thinking about dinner.” Dad rubs his eyes.

“Want me to call for sushi?” I keep my tone light. Pretending everything is OK is the modus operandi in our household. “Oh, that’s right.” I slap my hand to my forehead. “The dead fish won’t hear me. I’ll just run out and pick some up.” Dad jokes are a good technique too, though Dad’s much better at them than I am.

Mom turns to the window. She takes a long sip as she gazes at the Empire State Building. It’s lit up blue and green tonight.

“That’s a good idea, honey. Here.” Dad hands me his credit card.

Mom whips around. She slams the glass down. Drops of wine splatter like blood across the granite. “What are you doing?!”

I drop Dad’s card.

“We need to have dinner,” Dad says quietly. Why isn’t he joking with her, making her laugh like he usually does?

“Sushi is expensive. We’ll make do with whatever is in the refrigerator.” She slides by me, picking up the platinum card and chucking it back at Dad. She drags out cheese and grapes and hard salami. Leftovers from her book club.

I take small breaths. Mom gets like this when she’s stressed, all crazy frugal even though we don’t need to be. It’s like a flashback from her childhood. Dad always stops her. He wraps her in his arms, puts on the Buena Vista Social Club, and makes her dance with him. He starts out dancing badly, to make her laugh. Sometimes she cries. But he always promises he’ll take care of her and that she’ll never have to live like that again.

Tonight Dad just takes out some plates. He reaches for a tumbler and gets down a bottle of scotch. I’ve only ever seen that bottle when their friends the Rosens come over after a show.

I try to swallow but my mouth is too dry. “Is it Merrit?”

Last I talked to Merrit, he mentioned a new app he was developing. The campus sports teams were loving it. It was spreading “faster than an STI.” He’d been talking so fast, I couldn’t help but be nervous—I know all the signs of a manic episode now. But Merrit promised he’d been sleeping and taking his meds. So I assumed he was just excited. What if I was wrong?

Dad puts down the scotch. “Merrit’s fine.” His hand comes out for emphasis.

I relax my fist, loosening the nails digging into my palm. Whatever it is, it can’t be that bad, then.

I get out three placemats and arrange them on the banquet. Mom shakes her head.

“I’m not eating. It’s just you and your father.”

“Elisa,” Dad starts.

“You think I can eat at a time like this?” Her accent thickens, hardening her words.

Dad looks down at the polished stone floor. I’m thoroughly confused. Mom turns back to me. “How’s your school going? Any homework tonight?”

“It’s all fine, Mom. I have a paper due tomorrow on Franny and Zooey, but I already have a draft.”

“Bring me your laptop. I’ll read your paper while you eat.”

“Why?” She doesn’t usually go over my work.

“This has nothing to do with Isabelle,” Dad interrupts.

The look Mom gives him is so vicious it makes me step back. “It has everything to do with Isabelle. It’s even more important now that she gets good grades.”

I’m used to Mom being overly dramatic. But she’s starting to freak me out. “Dad? What’s going on?”

“Nothing, sweetie, everything’s going to be fine.”

“How can you say that to her? God, and with that smile on your face?” Mom marches over for her glass of wine. She grabs it but doesn’t take a drink. “Your father lost his job. He was fired.” Lost his job? But he’s not a trader. Dad’s the chief risk officer. His job is secure.

“I just don’t understand why you signed off on a deal you knew wasn’t sound.” Mom glares at him.

“Elisa.” Dad sighs. “The MD made it clear he only wanted my approval.”

She waves an arm. “Do you have proof? An email? Something to demonstrate you’re not accountable?” Dad doesn’t answer. “You don’t, do you? They would never be so foolish as to put something like that in writing.”

Dad comes over to the table and rests a hand on my shoulder. “I don’t want you to worry. I can get another job.”

Mom makes a mild shrieking sound. “Why would you tell her that? It was a multibillion-dollar screw-up, Isabelle. And now the SEC is investigating.” She starts muttering in Spanish. “You don’t know what will happen. You don’t.” She’s gripping the glass so hard the tips of her fingers are white.

Dad reaches for Mom. She doesn’t step away. He rubs her arm, his voice dropping to a soothing drone. “There are plenty of other banks in the city. I’ll find work at one of them.”

Mom takes a long drink of wine. “You just told me you might be blacklisted.”

Dad glances at me. He ducks down to find Mom’s eyes. “That would be a worst-case scenario,” he whispers. “We’ll have to make adjustments. You’re right. We don’t need to eat sushi every week. At least not from Takai.” He tries for a smile, and Mom leans into him. His nickname for Mom’s favorite sushi place is the word expensive in Japanese.

“We can sell the Hamptons house. We hardly ever go out east anymore anyway.”

Mom’s mouth opens.

“And there are other ways we can cut back,” Dad murmurs. “Isabelle’s been begging to attend the Manhattan Ballet Academy full time since she was twelve. It’s a specialized city school. Free tuition.”

Mom’s finger slices the air. “No. We are not sacrificing her education. Deerwood has one of the best college acceptance lists in the city. Merrit graduated from there. And their STEM curriculum is excellent, not to mention the special mentorship program they have for women who want to go into medicine.”

Dad sees me chewing my lip. He knows I don’t want to be a doctor, that I hate the sight of blood. He sighs. “What do you think, Isabelle? If the Academy will honor your acceptance from last summer, would you like to go there?”

I give the faintest of nods. Dad knows I would kill to be able to dance full time. But I don’t want to get my hopes up. They might not accept me. I’m older than most candidates for transfer. Mom is looking at me like I’m holding a knife and I’m about to stab her.

“Mom, there’s this one dancer, Mia, who got into Columbia early decision from the Academy. She wants to be an OB doctor.”

Mom’s lips pinch. She doesn’t believe me.

“David Jeffries is on the board there,” Dad says. “I can ask him who the right person to call would be. This is a good idea, Elisa. The savings would be significant.”

Mom doesn’t say no. She doesn’t shout and stomp her foot. That means there’s a chance.

“Come on, we can talk more about this later. For now, let’s sit and eat together. I’ve been craving”—Dad squints at the plastic container—“almond cilantro hummus all day.” He wheels Mom into the seat of honor, directly north of the Manhattan skyline. Dad sits next to her, tapping the cushion of the bench on his other side. I slide in.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)