She didn't want to say anything. It wasn't that bad, really. It wasn't home, but it was clean and dry. Small. But clean.
"Jesus," he said.
"It's not that bad, Tommy," she said, trying to believe it as she said it. She looked up into his tired eyes and smiled at him.
"I'm so sorry, Mel." His voice was thin and weary. Dry leaves over the sidewalk. That's what she thought of. That thin rasping. He'd been working non-stop to put what little they had left into a storage unit. 48 hours of packing and carrying. She didn't know how to drive a manual shift so he had to do that too. They'd managed to fit everything into one giant truck. She tried to help, but all she could do was try to make sure he had something to eat as he worked.
"I'm sorry I couldn't help more, Tommy," she said as he walked in the little room. She shut the door behind them and looked around the little room.
"Don't worry about it, he said wearily. He dropped down to the bed, slumping down and just staring out to the wall.
"Um...Oh, they have air conditioning. That's nice."
"Yeah."
"Do you... Why don't you go get cleaned up. You'll feel better."
"Right," he said, rubbing his hands over his face. "I'm so sorry, Mel." He sounded so stretched. So thin. He just stared out at the pale walls. She sat down next to him and took his hand, feeling the warm flesh.
"Stop saying that," she said softly. "You did what you could do."
"It was just too much. I can't make that much."
"Mom and dad didn't leave you much to work with."
"I should have been able to do something." She wrapped her arms around him, and pressed her face to his shoulder. "Jesus..."
"We'll be alright. Let's just forget about the house. It's not ours now, so let's not waste our thoughts worrying about it."
"For Christ's sake, we're..." He just shook his head, letting his arm drape over her shoulders as she held him. His free hand wiped down his dirty face.
"We've got enough to stay two nights. I get my check Saturday. You get yours on Monday. We'll be fine."
"If I'd known things were that bad, I'd have gotten a real job," he said. "I didn't know."
"Tommy, you have to put this all behind us. I can refund my summer tuition. Full refunds go all the way to next Wednesday. We'll think of something."
"I don't want you to cancel your classes. Mom and dad wouldn't want that."
"Well, they wouldn't want us out on the street either."
"We're living in a fucking motel, Melanie."
"And we're fine. Mom and Dad put the house in hock, not us."
"I tried, Mel, I really did. I went to everyone I could think of for a loan. There's no one can float us that much."
"Tommy, go get a bath. You'll feel better."
"I don't want a bath."
"It'll make the aches go away. Take a shower, then fill the tub and just slide under the water. I'll set this all up."
"How you feeling?"
"I'm fine."
"You feel warm." The backs of his fingers laid against her ear, then her forehead.
"I'm just tired."
"You take all your pills? I didn't even check," he said angrily. "I'm sorry." He jumped up and threw his bag on the bed, nearly ransacking the contents.
"Tommy, I've got them in my little black zipper," she said, digging through her duffel and pulling the little nylon case out.
"Oh. I'm sorry. I'm just tired."
"I'm sure. I don't know how you did it."
"I'm going to take a shower," he said, standing up with a grunt. He limped on his foot. He was a wreck. She watched her brother, someone she always saw as a kind of giant, walk with effort through the little room into the bathroom.
She looked around, looking repeatedly at the cheap curtains and thinking of the soft, shimmering weave curtains she had in her bedroom. But she didn't have a bedroom anymore. She didn't have a kitchen, or a dining room, or anything. She had a little room that cost more than they had to spend, and it wasn't anywhere she wanted to sleep.
She waited until she heard the shower curtain roll along before she cried. It had been hard enough to lose her mom and dad. But they were just starting to get their lives back together when they lost the house. Tommy had been trying to save it, but it was too far in debt. The bank owned it, and that was that. It wasn't the bank's fault. She understood that. It was just something that happened.
There wasn't enough life insurance left over to pay for anything more than a few meals and the rental truck. Her house, the place she lived, and played as a child, and the place where she had her first goodnight kiss from a boy, the place she first...it wasn't hers anymore.
She wiped her eyes and let out a long breath, putting her hands in her jacket pockets. She felt the crumpled up eviction order. It felt so normal. Just a piece of paper. But it was like a big knife in her gut.
She had saved it, pulling it from the trash after Tommy had finished talking to the deputy sheriff. He was a nice old man. He'd come by to make sure they understood what was going to happen. Tommy had talked him into stalling long enough to let him move their stuff out. They didn't want strangers coming in and dumping everything on the front lawn.
He understood. He had told Tommy that he would come by and check on them every few hours. As long as they were making progress and they weren't just stalling to try and give themselves time to find something else, he'd keep the crew from coming out.
Tommy had crumpled up the eviction order and tossed it in the trash. She'd pulled it free. She looked at it for almost an hour that night. It seemed incredibly simple for something that had the power to take their home and put them on the street.
In the motel room, listening to the water run, she took a calming breath and smoothed the eviction order out, pressing her little fingers along the paper as she laid it on her lap. She folded it neat and set it in a small pocket on her duffel. She pulled out a rumpled dollar she found in her jacket pocket. Every dollar mattered.
The room was 45 dollars a night. It was tiny, and it was all they could get. Everyone else wanted credit cards and they didn't have any that weren't stretched to the limit.
Melanie sighed in resignation and set about making the room as presentable as she could. It was clean enough, but it wasn't home.
* * * *
Tom slid under the water, having to bend his legs up to fit, but sighing as he felt the hot water relax his aching body. Two days. He'd done nothing but carry boxes and furniture for two days straight. Lift as much as you want, he thought, two day of that, and you're fucking wiped. His fingers hurt to the point of not being able to make a fist.
He'd never been that tired. Melanie had diligently kept an eye on his meals. She seemed to know just when he needed on the most. Never too heavy. She cleared a space in the mess at night and made a bed of blankets and the pillow she'd saved out.
He only slept an hour, but it was glorious. He woke to her fingers brushing his hair from his face as she smiled down at him. She'd packed the entire living room in that time, and looked more than a little flushed.
It was the last thing he let her do.
"Tommy?" Her voice was faint behind the door.
"Hmm?"
"Can I come in? I have to pee." He slid the curtain across.
"Yeah." He heard the door open and then shut.
"You feel better?" she asked him.
"Clean."
"Um," she said, lifting the seat cover on the toilet. "Could you..." He used his foot to turn on the water, letting her use the toilet without him hearing.
"Okay," she said, flushing. He cranked it back to normal and slid down, letting the water splash and cover his tight shoulders and neck.
"Tommy?"
"Yeah?"