or more, it had been an increasingly fraught occasion.
Sarah had been battling breast cancer, just as his mother had done, and like his mother, many years ago, she was losing the war. She had been through endless rounds of radiation and chemo, and even though she was only four years older than David, she looked like she was at death’s door. Her wavy brown hair, the same chestnut color as his own, was entirely gone, replaced with a wig that never sat quite right. Her eyebrows were penciled in, and her skin had a pale translucence.
And he loved her more than anyone in the world.
Their father had gone AWOL when he was just a toddler, and after their mother succumbed to the disease, it was Sarah who had pretty much raised him. He owed her everything, and there was nothing he could do to help her now.
Nothing, it seemed, that anyone could do.
He was just stamping the slush off his boots when she opened the door. Around her head, she was wearing a new silk scarf in a wild paisley pattern. It wasn’t great, but anything was better than that wig.
“Gary gave it to me,” she said, reading his mind as always.
“It’s nice,” David said, as she smoothed the silk along one side.
“Yeah, right,” she said, welcoming him in. “I think he hates the wig even more than I do.”
His little niece, Emme, was playing tennis on her Wii in the den, and when she saw him, she said, “Uncle David! I dare you to come and play me!”
She reminded him of Sarah when she was a little girl, but he sensed that Emme didn’t like it when he said that. Was she just showing her fierce independence, or was it a sign of some subliminal—and justifiable—fear? Was she aware of the terrible ordeal her mother was going through and trying to separate herself from a similar prospect? Or was he imagining the whole thing?
Eight-year-old girls, he recognized, were beyond his field of expertise.
A few minutes later, right after David had lost his first two games, Gary came in from the garage, carrying a bunch of flyers for the open house he was holding the next day. Gary was a real-estate broker, and by all accounts a good one, but in this market nothing was selling. And even when he did get an exclusive listing, it was usually with a reduced commission.
He was also carrying a pie he’d picked up at Bakers Square.
“Is it a chocolate cream?” Emme asked, and when her dad confirmed it, she let out an ear-piercing squeal.
Over dinner, Gary said, “It’s the Internet that’s killing the real-estate business. Everybody’s convinced they can sell their houses themselves these days.”
“But are there any buyers out there?” David asked.
“Not many,” Gary said, pouring himself another glass of wine and holding the bottle out toward David, who passed. “And the ones that there are think no price is ever low enough. They want to keep making counteroffer after counteroffer until the whole deal winds up falling apart.”
“Is it time for pie yet?” Emme asked for the tenth time.
“After we’re done with the meat loaf,” Sarah said, urging David totake another piece. There were dark circles under her eyes that the overhead light only made worse. David took another slice just to make his sister happy.
“Save room for the pie,” Emme said in a stage whisper, just in case anyone had forgotten about it in the last five seconds.
When dinner—and dessert—were over, and David was helping to clear the table, Gary disappeared into the garage again. By the time he came back in, he was dragging a six-foot-tall tree.
“Who wants to decorate a Christmas tree?” he announced.
“I do! I do!” Emme shouted, jumping up and down. “Can we do it tonight?”
“That’s why your uncle David is here,” Gary said. “To help us get the lights on. You mind?” he asked, and David said he’d be glad to help.
“Hope you’re not starting to feel like a hired hand,” Sarah said, taking a plate David had just scraped clean and putting it in
Hilda Newman and Tim Tate