Page 70 of The Deepest Lake
“You should tell someone,” I say, even though I don’t know what there is to tell, because it seems like the right thing to say to someone who needs a therapist or a lawyer—knowing Eva, probably both.
Her voice is hoarse and high-pitched, unpleasantly childlike.
“I can’t.”
“I really think you should try.”
She looks over her shoulder again before turning back to me, pulling my hand into her lap, entwining our fingers. “I won’t say it more than once, so you need to listen.”
“Okay.” I face forward, ignoring the discomfort in my hand as she squeezes.
“I lost Adhika before she came to term. At twenty-five weeks.”
“What?” That’s the single, dumb word that drops from my open mouth. I can’t help it. I’m remembering the last chapters of her memoir. There was no mention of Adhika being born that early. “She was born premature?” I stop myself from asking: And died months later?
“No. She was stillborn.”
“At . . . at home?
“No, at the hospital.”
I imagine Adhika as Eva described her on the page: healthy, chubby, normal, at least until she died unexpectedly, of sudden infant death syndrome.
“But in the book . . .”
Her voice drops. “Forget about the damn book for a minute.”
“But,” I say, unable to think of anything but the book, which made no mention of a stillbirth. “Adhika? What went wrong?”
“You remember the part when we go to the hospital, because I’m spotting?”
“Yeah.”
“That part was mostly true.”
But not the important part. Eva wasn’t spotting. She was hemorrhaging. There was nothing to be done.
Things got more complicated a week later. By that point, Eva’s Facebook, Instagram and Twitter were all blowing up with thousands of fans asking why Eva hadn’t posted her daily updates. Was something wrong?
“Richard and Jonah told me to keep the blog and social media updates going. Just be vague for now. But a writer can’t be vague. So I did the work. I wrote the scene.”
“The scene of you coming home, after the bleeding stopped? When you and Jonah have breakfast in bed?”
“That one.”
“It was one of my favorites.”
“Thank you,” she whispers. “It was just so . . . comforting. To write it the way it should have been. The yogurt with fresh berries, the orange juice—Jonah’s with bourbon. The way he took the brown bag with my bloodied underwear out to the trash can. The way I talked to unborn Adhika and told her how she’d scared both of us, but him, especially. My new love, who until that moment hadn’t fully realized how much he wanted to be a father.”
I think about the details—which ones are probably true, which entirely false. The bloody underwear and the bourbon: true. The idea that Adhika was still alive: false. But the breakfast in bed and the idea that Jonah was now more committed to fatherhood—those parts were a load of crap.
“People ate it up,” Eva says. “The fact that I’d been offline a week ramped up everyone’s curiosity. It doubled my followers, who’d been worried about Jonah’s ambivalence. This was a good moment for him as a new father, in their eyes.”
She’s smiling ruefully. I want to shout, Not too good a moment for Jonah if it never happened! But I can’t process this yet. I still don’t completely understand.
“Richard had been telling me to keep my platform growing,” Eva says. “He told me to keep doing what I was doing.”
More blog posts and updates followed. She wrote about bed rest, about eating well for healing, about her ever-swelling breasts. She wrote about the true cost of middle-age fertility treatments for AARP’s magazine. She wrote about fifty-something sexual desire for Cosmopolitan. She wrote about her love for Jonah—and the trickiness of third-semester sex—for Modern Love, an essay that was optioned for a television episode.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70 (reading here)
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123
- Page 124
- Page 125
- Page 126
- Page 127