“I dunno.” I shrugged.
“Thomas, I read the police report.”
“Then, you know.”
She simply looked at me and took a long drag, letting the smoke out through her nostrils and moving her thumb around the bottom of the filter as she waited for a better answer.
“It says I was in the water for two hours,” I told her.
“And how long did you actually remain inside the lake?”
“Five.”
“You were in shock when they found you, correct?”
“Uh-huh.” I nodded.
“Did they ask you what had happened?”
“They’d spoken to Emma and Summer. They knew.”
She took another drag and stared.
“Yes. They asked,” I said, squeezing the pack of Marlboro’s in my hand.
I’d never wanted a cigarette so bad in my life, but I kept feeling as though that was what she was waiting for (aside from me breaking down). That moment in which I would cave and get so uncomfortable by one of her questions that I couldn’t help but smoke. So, naturally, I fought the urge with all my might.
“Did you cry?” She tilted her head a bit.
“What?”
“Did you cry? When you recounted what had happened.”
“Um…I—I dunno.” I broke eye contact for the first time as I let my eyes wander, trying to remember. “No, I don’t think so,” I eventually said as I resumed staring back at her.
“What about when they found his body?”
“No.”
“At the funeral?”
I shook my head.
“When you used the razor?”
“You know I didn’t.” I narrowed my eyes.
“Why didn’t you?”
I shrugged.
“Didn’t you find it sad?”
I didn’t answer.
“When did you cry?” she asked, casually flicking ash into the crystal ashtray on the coffee table between us. “For the last time, not counting the hospital?”
“I don’t know,” I lied.