I thanked them for coming. I waited while they left and then I turned back to the workbench and looked more carefully at what else the room contained. Beside the sculpture, partially covered by a cloth, were sketches.
Dozens of them, loose and stacked, some rolled and tied with string. I picked up the first one and held it toward the light from the open door. A pencil drawing of a woman’s face, precise and studied, the work of a hand that had drawn the same subject many times and had learned, in the repetition, to find it from any angle.
It was the face of the sculpture. It was my face. There was a date in the corner.
March 12th, 1995. Thirty-one years ago. I had not been born yet in 1995.
I was twenty-eight years old standing in this shed, and someone had been drawing my face for more than three decades before I came to live two houses down from them. I picked up another one. The same face, a slightly different angle.
And there was something about it now, something I had not let myself fully see in the first drawing, that the face was not quite mine alone. The jaw had a quality. The way the eyes sat in the face.
I picked up a third drawing and held all three in my hands and looked at them together and understood, slowly and with the specific reluctance that attends understanding you are not ready for, that the face in these drawings also looked very much like my mother at twenty. The sketches went back decades when I looked at the dates. The same face appearing and reappearing across thirty years, aging in some, younger in others, as though someone had been imagining a whole life from a starting point that preceded my existence.
Beneath the sculpture, pressed flat against the table, was another envelope with my name on it in Mrs. Whitmore’s handwriting. Beneath that was a bundle of photographs, the slightly washed-out color of pictures printed in the early nineties, that era’s light preserved in its particular way.
I held the first photograph up to what remained of the daylight from the open door. Two women, arms around each other, smiling at the camera. The older one was a younger Mrs.
Whitmore, her hair still mostly dark, her face holding the same expression I had seen so many times over the fence, the warm uncomplicated pleasure of being where she was. The younger woman beside her was perhaps twenty years old, laughing at something happening just beyond the frame, her whole face open with it. She looked exactly like a photograph of my mother at twenty that had sat on the mantelpiece in our house my entire childhood.
A memory surfaced then, the involuntary kind that arrives fully formed. Several weeks after I had moved in, I had been showing Mrs. Whitmore something on my phone, a photo of a place we had been discussing, and I had swiped too far and landed on a photograph of my mother.
I had said, without thinking anything of it: that’s my mother, Jeanne. And I had kept scrolling to find what I was looking for. Mrs.
Whitmore had gone quiet for a moment. She had looked at the screen a beat longer than the occasion called for. I had noticed it, registered it as a small thing, and continued with what we were doing.
It had not stayed in my mind because there was no frame for it to be held in. There was a frame for it now. I opened the letter.
She wrote that she had known her health was declining and had made arrangements, through a girl she had befriended during her hospital visits, for the envelope to reach me on the day of her funeral because she had understood, with the precision of someone who has thought a thing through completely, that it had to be that day. That there was a kind of truth that needed the occasion of an ending to be finally speakable. She wrote that she had carried this for too long.
That I deserved to know it even if she was not there to give it to me in person. And then the sentence that took my legs: Amber, you are my granddaughter. I knew it the day you showed me your mother’s photo on your phone.
You have her face, and your mother is my daughter. I sat down on the floor of the shed. I sat there for some time.
Not thinking, exactly. More being rearranged from the inside, the way you are when a truth arrives that is too large to hold upright immediately and needs to be sat with before it can be carried. Mrs.
Whitmore was my grandmother. She had known who I was from the moment I showed her a photograph of my mother by accident, and she had said nothing. She had brought me pies and talked to me over the fence and waved when I came home from work and had never once told me.
And she had been drawing my mother’s face for thirty years before I came to live two houses away from her. I drove to my mother’s house in the city with the photographs on the passenger seat and the letter in my coat pocket, and I drove without fully thinking about what I was going to say because there was not a version of what I was going to say that I had any preparation for. My mother, Jeanne, was in her kitchen when I arrived.
She looked at my face and set down what she was holding without asking any questions, which is what she does when she understands that the situation is beyond the ordinary register of things that can be approached normally. I put the photographs on the kitchen table without speaking and watched her face. She went very still.
She sat down slowly and picked up the top photograph with both hands, the way you handle something fragile or something that requires your whole attention, and she looked at it for a long time. “Where did you get this?”
“From Mrs. Whitmore’s shed.
My neighbor. She left me a letter, Mom.”
I told her what the letter said. I watched my mother’s face while I said the words, and I watched her in the same moment understand everything I was telling her and be taken apart by it, the years-long weight of something she had been carrying becoming visible all at once in the way that things become visible when they are finally named.
She pressed a hand over her mouth. I sat down across from her and waited, because whatever she was carrying she had been carrying it alone for a very long time and it was not mine to rush. It came out in pieces, the way things do when they have been held in one shape for too long and need to be released slowly to keep from breaking the person they are coming out of.
Mrs. Whitmore and her husband had adopted my mother as an infant. They had raised her with everything they had, in the white house with the flower beds, the house I had been in hundreds of times over the past three years drinking tea at the kitchen table.
My mother had grown up in that house. She had been loved there. When my mother graduated, her father had just received a serious diagnosis, and his one hope in the time he felt he had was to see his daughter settled before he could no longer be present for anything.
My mother was in love with someone her parents did not know, a man she had met through friends, my father, and the pressure of family expectation collided with the intensity of new love in the way it sometimes does when someone is young and frightened and not yet capable of understanding that the things they feel urgently cannot wait are usually the very things that can. She left a note. She took my father and ran.
“I told myself I’d explain later,” she said, her voice quiet and effortful, the voice of someone dragging something heavy across difficult ground. “That I’d go back and make them understand. But later kept moving further away.”
My father had died less than two years after they eloped, leaving my mother alone with an infant and a grief for him that arrived at the same time as a guilt about her parents that she did not know how to hold separately from the grief.
She had been







