graduation—remember that, Jed? We came home and the whole house
smelled like fabric softener?”
Jed hid his face and said, “Ow ow ow ow—my eyes! Dammit,
Andi—did you need to go there?”
The family might have laughed forever then, but on screen,
Xander"s face got tense.
“What happened?” Penny said suddenly. “I didn"t hear what she
said!”
“She asked about Xan"s mom,” Chris told her, his voice tight, and
the effect on the living room was electric.
“Didn"t your mother pass away recently?” Barbara asked
sympathetically, and Xander shrugged.
“I"d heard that, yeah.”
Chris looked at him, concerned. “When did that happen?”
“Right after the first playoff series—you were still in the hospital. I
had other things to worry about.”
Barbara shifted forward, as though about to get ready to do some
heavy work, in spite of the Chanel suit and the well-coifed silver hair.
“So, Xander, when was the last time you saw your mother?”
Xander looked away again. He did that a lot throughout the
interview, and it only made his regard even more significant when he
focused on something.
“I"d just turned eighteen. Chris and I had signed our letters the
week before, and his folks took us out to eat. We came out of the
restaurant, and there was a woman across from the restaurant
screaming at a guy about giving her some money for his bang as he
drove off. I"m pretty sure that was her.”
Chris looked at him in horror. “Oh, God. Xander. You could have
told us!”
Xander shifted in his seat, and for once didn"t look Chris in the