Authors: Catherine McKenzie
I twist Jeff’s chair back and forth, back and forth, watching Beth trying to calm herself, trying to let her mind be.
“But what if you found out? Then wouldn’t all the time you’d spent together between when he did it and when it came out, wouldn’t that all be a lie?”
“People always say that too, but what does it really mean? Like, if you’d been on some great trip, say, and had an amazing time together, would that mean that it wasn’t really amazing?”
“I’ve been trying to figure that out.”
“Precisely, because it’s not obvious. I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about this, too much probably, and I don’t think that bad actions erase good ones. Not really.”
“So if you could change the past?”
“I’d tell Rick to keep his goddamn mouth shut, and maybe we’d both be happy right now, instead of neither of us being happy.”
“Are you really unhappy, Bethie?”
She opens her eyes, looks at me for a moment. “Sometimes. Yes. It’s hard. It’s hard to find someone you’d rather spend time with than not.”
“I know.”
“I know you do, honey. I’m sorry. I’m not trying to bring you down. I’m … I think you should let this go. I think you should focus on the good times you had together, the good life. Getting hung up on this, it’s a way of not moving on, of keeping happiness at bay.”
“Jeff only died a couple of weeks ago. I wouldn’t be happy, anyway.”
“Of course not, but you’re going to be someday, and sooner if you focus on what used to make you happy.” She comes up on her knees and rests her chin on my lap. “Don’t let this define you, even if it happened. Jeff didn’t tell you. He didn’t leave. He chose to stay.”
Beth’s right, of course. Maybe not about all of it. Maybe not the part about knowing and wishing you didn’t. Or maybe she is. She’s the one who really knows. I only have suspicions, doubts, and circumstantial evidence. I can still decide. I can acquit Jeff. I can choose. Like I did all those years ago. I can choose him, and that’s probably the right thing.
“Mom?”
“We’re in here.”
Seth pops his head in the door. “Can you give me a ride to school? I missed the bus.”
I drive Seth to school, drop him off, watch him walk into the building, greet his friends, act normal.
When he’s safely inside, I cue in the latest piece that Connie wants me to learn on my iPod, Mozart’s Rondo in A Minor, a tricky piece I don’t know. As it starts playing through the car’s mediocre sound system, I think about what Connie told me about it. How the principal theme, or refrain, alternates with contrasting themes, called episodes, or digressions. There’s always a pattern: theme, episode, theme, episode 2, and so on. The number of themes can vary, and the recurring part is sometimes embellished or shortened to provide variation. But when you listen to it, it’s reassuring, because no matter how far off it goes, it will always come back to the theme. It always ends where it starts, telling a story, then folding in on itself, its end in its beginning.
When I get to my office at the daycare, I find Mandy Holden waiting for me, her foot tapping her impossibly high heel on the tiled floor.
“Claire, finally. I need to talk to you about something.”
I sit down at my desk. My message light is still blinking angrily. Maybe I’ll return some calls today.
“What’s up?”
“I’ve been thinking. Have you ever considered being open on the weekends?”
“Pardon?”
“The week’s so hectic, and that’s the only time I can really get things done, and it’s hard to find reliable babysitters, so I was thinking, if you had Saturday and Sunday hours, maybe even half days, you could make a killing, right?”
I sit there watching her, speechless, no idea even where to begin.
“What do you think?”
“I think that’s the craziest idea I’ve heard in a while.”
“Come on, you won’t even consider it?”
“That’s when the staff is off. We need the weekend. I need the weekend. Surely you can understand that?”
“Oh, well, when you put it that way …”
I can tell she’s thinking that if she sits here long enough, I might cave in to her insane idea. I start moving things around my desk, adjusting a pile of paper, opening my email, giving all the social cues that a normal person would know meant “We’re done.”
But not Mandy. “What if you hired additional staff?”
I shake my head as I notice a small card-sized box sitting on the edge of my desk. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t there the last time I was in the office, but it looks vaguely familiar. I pull it towards me as Mandy watches.
“What’s that?”
“Not sure.” I pull off the lid. There’s a sticky note inside with my sister’s handwriting on it. It reads:
Found this at Mom and Dad’s. I’ll do it if you will
.
I pull the sticky off and underneath it is a yellowing pile of business cards.
James & James—Attorneys at Law
.
“Are you going to be a lawyer again?” Mandy’s voice has a note of panic. “Are you closing Playthings?”
I close the box, smiling, which I’m sure was Beth’s intention. “No, Mandy. Relax.”
“But no weekend services?”
“No.”
She sighs. “I kind of expected you’d say that.”
“Good of you to ask, though. If you don’t ask, you don’t get.”
“That’s totally what I think!”
I smile at her, my eyes drifting away, and she finally gets it. She leaves, muttering something about checking on LT one last time. I reach for the box again, lifting the lid, taking out a card, wondering if this is something I should consider, if maybe Beth was being serious.
I connect my iPod to the speakers on my desk and cue up the Mozart again. I close my eyes and listen to the pattern, the little bits of the theme scattered through the different episodes, letting the music fill me, crowd out the lingering doubts and uncertainties, smoothing out the vast rocky unhappiness that fills me.
The main theme comes around again, tweaked, revised, but still close enough to the beginning to know that the journey hasn’t been so far. There’s a map back to where it all began.
It’s an ordinary day at the daycare.
I spend the days following my confrontations
with Claire nervous, worried, waiting for the axe to fall. But it doesn’t.
I go to work expecting the phone to ring, an email to arrive, Brian to text me angrily that we need to talk, but none of that transpires.
Work is as it always is. People are hired, reprimanded, fired. They might be bringing a new round of consultants in. There’s a rumour that they’re thinking of eliminating the Safety Minute. I get two more citations for parking “illegally” in the parking lot. My pay will be docked next time, but I don’t care.
Zoey returns to normal. Back to hiding behind her curtain of hair, scribbling on pieces of paper. Brian sticks to his word, the doctor’s advice, and doesn’t bring up next month’s competition, one she’s already registered and paid for. She does.
She wants to go. She wants to show Ethan and the others that Nationals was an aberration. That she’s stronger than that. Stronger than me.
And since she is, I’m all for it. Brian protests, but I talk him into it. We’ll all go together, I say, and we’ll see. If she can’t handle it, then we’ll leave. But if she wants to do it, if she feels like she has something to prove, let’s help her do it.
Brian puts up a good fight, but his opponents are the two women in the world he loves most. We win.
By Friday, three weeks to the day that Jeff died, I’m starting to relax. Not entirely, but enough to have moments where I’m not feeling like some prisoner on death row, eating her last meal, spending her last hours with her family. And while Jeff’s face, things he said and wrote, the way his hands felt on mine that day on the golf course, are a constant companion, they feel more like a scrapbook than a threat. I know why I took the risks I took, but I’m relieved too. That I can keep all this as a memory. That I seem to have contained the collateral damage.
I try not to ask myself if I would do it all again. What we were thinking. Why we were willing to get so close to risking everything, other people. I tell myself I got sucked into the happiness, the surge of the drug we seemed to make together. But was it real? Would it have survived in real life? Would it even have happened if we didn’t have other lives to lead but had met each other first?
I guess everyone asks themselves that, about one thing or another. Jeff must’ve too. But we chose to give in to it. Each time we spoke or wrote or thought, we chose. The line we drew, the deadline, we chose that too. And it’s because of this one thing, this one right thing that we were going to have to
live with even if the worst hadn’t happened, that makes me feel like, in some small way, I deserve this reprieve.
I probably don’t. I probably don’t deserve any of this. But I’m not perfect. Nobody is. And maybe I’m kidding myself, but it feels like I paid for my mistakes, that I’m paying still.
And Jeff? Jeff has paid in full.
It’s Friday night. Brian’s out on a call and Zoey’s downstairs, waiting for me to watch
The Notebook
, a movie she’s chosen because she’s knows it will be “so bad, it’s good.”
The popcorn’s in the microwave, popping furiously, suffusing the house with its buttery smell.
“
Mmooomm!
Let’s go!”
“I’ll be down in a sec. Fast-forward through the previews.”
I go to my bedroom, open a drawer, and feel for the back of it until my hand closes on the USB key. I pull it out by the lanyard, letting it dangle in front of me like a hypnotist’s watch.
I cross to the bed where my laptop is sitting. I insert the USB key, click it open, and highlight the emails, my hand hovering over the Delete key. Erasing these will be like erasing part of myself, but I count to three quickly and do it. I pull the Band-Aid off. It stings, I’ll have moments of regret, but everyone has regrets.
Then I open my email, go to the draft section, find the email I wrote weeks ago, right after we imposed the deadline. It’s entitled, simply,
Goodbye
.
It contains the only poem I wrote about us, the one I read to myself on the plane ride to his funeral. It’s not any good. It’s not anything I would’ve published in any circumstances. But
when the words come, and they come rarely now, I write them down. And when it came time to write this email, something I felt like I had to do in advance as part of my preparation, I thought of it and typed it out.
They’re the words I wanted to try to leave with Jeff at his funeral. The words no one but the two of us should see.
My hand hesitates. Shifting between wanting to send the email or erase it. But I know what I have to do.
I hit Delete.
I have promises to keep.
And I will keep them, always.
Turns out that Tish’s room
wasn’t just on the same floor as mine, it was next to mine. We shared a wall, and that Saturday night, after the maybe-okay-she-probably-was-flirting-with-me dinner partner, and too many glasses of wine, I lay on my back in bed listening to her move around her room: the TV turning on; her smashing into something and swearing loudly; running the water for a bath.
I turned on my own TV then. I had willpower, and I was exercising it, but every man has his limits.
When I was about to drift off into a wine-fuelled sleep, I heard her door open. I sprang from my bed and pressed my eye against the peephole, fast enough to catch her walking past, her hair wet, wearing the kind of loose cotton clothing one might wear as pyjamas, hugging a blanket to her chest.
I pulled on my jeans and a sweatshirt, and grabbed a bottle of wine and a corkscrew from the welcome basket. I almost forgot my room key, but remembered it right before my door
clanged shut. Key in my pocket, I walked in my bare feet down the hall to the elevator.
Tish was nowhere to be found.
I waited thirty seconds for the elevator, and then I was in the empty bright lobby with one person behind the desk. Was I imagining it, or were the front doors still rattling in their hinges?
Outside, my eyes adjusted to the night, searching for movement. There. Something white in the dark, moving away quickly, a determined destination.
I followed her. I tried to walk casually, to make sure I didn’t spook her like a deer in the woods. She was heading towards the golf course. The sky was clear and full of stars, the air damp from the irrigation system, the grass wet and slick against my tender feet. The moon was rising in a sliver.
She walked through the first tee-box and onwards towards the second. She seemed to be almost running away, or maybe I imagined that because in this moment it felt like we were running away together.
She stopped on the other side of the ladies’ tee on the second hole and spread her blanket along the slope.
Then she turned and spoke into the night. “Why are you following me?”
I thought she sounded afraid.
“It’s me,” I tried to reassure her. “It’s Jeff.”
“I know who it is.”
“Oh, sorry, I —”
“No, it’s okay. You’re here now.”
She turned and sat. I hesitated for a moment, then followed her, setting the wine bottle down next to me. The corkscrew dug into my thigh, but I left it there.
“What are you doing out here?” I asked.
“Told you. Conjunction.” She pointed to the sky. “See that bright star in the crescent? That’s Venus.” I nodded. “Now look left. That fainter star’s Jupiter.”
“Neat.”
“Don’t make fun of me.”
“I’m not. Truly.”
She turned towards me. In the darkness I couldn’t tell if her face was registering annoyance or if she was trying to gauge my seriousness.
“I mean it,” I said. “Tell me more.”
She lay down, her legs straight below her, her arms at her sides. “If we had a telescope or binoculars, we could see Mercury too. And in a couple of months, Venus is going to traverse the sun, like an eclipse, and that’s really rare. It only happens twice every hundred years or so. Not again in our lifetime.”
I chuckled.
“What?”
“Nothing. You’re cute.”
“Gee, thanks.”
“I don’t mean it in a bad way. I like how enthusiastic you are about things.”
“I talk too much.”
“I like listening to you talk.”
“Okay,” she said, but then she fell silent while we watched the black sky and the bright stars.
I lay there, listening to her breathing, feeling the world spin underneath us, tilting as all the wine I’d drunk refused to release its grip.
After a while, I heard her shifting. I looked over. She was
on her side, facing me, her hands tucked under the side of her face, her knees pulled up.
“This is … nice,” she said.
I turned so my position mirrored her own. “It is. It really is.”
“I’m glad I came.”
“Me too.”
I reached out and stroked the side of her face. She made a small noise—a gasp—but didn’t pull away. Her skin was soft and my brain was fuzzy, and the only thing I could think of was how her lips would taste.
I kissed her. Hungrily. Slowly. Her lips. Her face. Her neck.
I kissed her.
And she kissed me back.
Afterwards, we lay wrapped in the blanket, our clothes scattered around us, loose limbed, our tastes mixed together, mixing with the night, mixing with the stars. Our foreheads were touching, our mouths inches apart, then together again, small kisses, resting against one another. My thumb rubbed little circles into the small of her back, and her hands rested on my waist, holding me inside her. She was warm, so warm, and the small beat of her pulse kept me hard enough to stay in place.
“Someone may have heard that,” she said eventually, smiling against my lips.
I kissed her again. “Shh. Don’t worry. No one heard.”
“The birds did. And the stars.” She let out a sob, then caught it. I felt a few tears fall against my cheek.
“I’m so sorry, Tish. This is my fault.”
“That’s not why I’m crying.”
“Why then?”
“Because I feel so happy. And I know I’m never going to feel this way again, and that makes me sad.”
“Do you want to? Feel this way again?”
She pulled my hips closer and it was my turn to gasp. “Of course I do. But, we said … we said we wouldn’t. We shouldn’t have done this. We can’t.”
“We can’t,” I agreed, though maybe she’d been asking a question. “A one-time thing.”
“Yes.”
Her hands moved to my face, forcing me to look her in the eyes I was already lost in.
“We can’t tell, okay? We have to … this has to be our thing. Ours.”
“Yes.”
“Promise?” she asked.
“Promise,” I agreed.