The Year We Turned Forty (37 page)

BOOK: The Year We Turned Forty
6.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Her follow-up memoir focused on her reconciliation with Colin and the foundation they began together, one that provided support, both mental and financial, to those trying to become parents. In vitro, adoption, fostering, it didn't matter. Their goal was to help other families get through the process without imploding, the way Gabriela and Colin almost had.

After many sleepless nights and arguments, they finally agreed not to adopt or foster a child, instead deciding they'd much rather throw their energy into helping others find their baby instead of risking their still-fragile marriage all over again. It was hard to explain, but helping others not have to go through the pain they did was enough. And as much as she
had loved the virtual friends she'd met on the message boards while she was trying to conceive, she wished she'd had more of a personal connection. That's what their foundation aimed to be.

Gabriela leaned in and gave Colin a quick, salty kiss as she looked out over the Pacific Ocean. It hadn't happened overnight, in fact it had taken years, but they had finally worked themselves back to a happy place—in some ways even happier than they'd been before. Their relationship now had some scar tissue—but in Gabriela's eyes, it only made them stronger.

“You guys kept me up with all your partying last night!” Emily said as she walked out from the house, with an arm full of textbooks, her long blond hair pulled back into a neat ponytail. “Aren't the twins and I supposed to be the ones boozing it up, not the fifty-year-olds?”

Claire reached out and swatted Emily's leg with her magazine. “It's not our fault
you're
the one acting like an old lady!” she teased, grinning wildly and eyeing her books. “Always studying—even on this trip!”

•  •  •

Claire had woken up that morning nine years ago tangled in Mason's arms.
We have a second chance,
she thought as tears slid silently down her face. She had jumped out of bed quickly and jogged down the hall to Emily's bedroom, creaking the door open and watching her sleep peacefully for a few minutes before shaking her awake gently. “Hey,” she said when Emily's eyes opened.

“Hey,” Emily repeated, propping herself up on her arm.

“I'm sorry about last night. I was wrong to keep those letters from you. And even when I sent your response, there was a
huge part of me that didn't want him to respond. I didn't want to share you.”

Emily's eyes welled up with tears. “I just want to have a dad, like everyone else,” she said, the last words barely a whisper.

Claire fought back her own tears as she thought about her relationship with her own dad, unable to imagine a life without him, especially now that her mom was gone. “I know that now. I thought I was protecting you. But I think I was trying to protect myself even more. And I'm sorry for that. It was selfish.”

Emily smiled. “So I'm not in trouble for going behind your back?”

Claire laughed. “In this case, I think it's understandable. And I promise we'll work out something with your dad, so you can start spending time with him. Okay?”

“Okay,” Emily had said before lying down and closing her eyes again, Claire playing with her hair until she fell back asleep, then crawling back into her own bed and inserting herself back into Mason's strong arms, where she knew she belonged.

David had stayed true to his promise to be an active part of Emily's life. Claire had met with him a few days after the party and laid out her conditions. He couldn't be a fair-weather father, he had to promise to be a participant in her life and let her be one in his. Claire had brought photos of Emily from over the years and filled David in on all she could about her childhood. As David studied the school pictures, Claire could see the regret in his eyes over all the time he'd missed, then he'd looked at Claire and vowed not to leave again, revealing he had remarried last year and couldn't wait for Emily to become a
part of their family too. He and his wife lived two hours south, but David drove up every other weekend, and he and Emily and sometimes Claire and David's wife, Gretchen, began to slowly get to know each other. Claire liked Gretchen immediately, and couldn't help but wonder if she was the influence David had needed.

Claire still couldn't believe the contrast between this Emily and the one from her former life—this version of her daughter had just graduated from UCLA and was studying to take the GRE in preparation for her grad school applications. This Emily was kind and selfless at times—and Claire knew that a big part of the change had been David's presence in her life. And Mason's—he'd accepted David unconditionally from day one and also proved to be an important role model in Emily's life.

Emily had stood by Mason's side the night he proposed to Claire. Claire had looked to Emily, who had nodded her head vigorously before Claire whispered yes and said a silent thank-you to Blair Wainright, wherever the hell he was.

•  •  •

“Where's Jessie?” Claire asked, looking toward the house.

“She woke up early and went into town with Lucas and the girls,” Mason said as he walked up.

“More shopping?” Claire laughed, thinking back to the orange-and-brown-striped poncho she'd bought Lucas earlier in the week, and the confused look on his face when she'd given it to him.

“Grant went with her—for damage control. He said they were already going to need another suitcase just to cart home all her trinkets.”

Claire laughed and caught Gabriela's eye, both of them knowing her road had been the hardest.

Jessie had forced her eyes open the morning after the party, not sure which reality she was waking up in, not sure which reality she
wanted
to wake up in. She rolled over to find Grant awake, staring at her, his lips pursed in thought. Her chest soared and then dropped with a thud to the floor. Grant was still hers, but it wasn't worth keeping him if it meant she had to continue to lie. It wasn't fair to Grant, and it wasn't fair to Peter, and it definitely wasn't fair to Lucas or her girls. So she ran her hand along the profile of his face and began to tell her story, not surprised at all that her heart broke into a million pieces all over again just like it had the first time she'd broken his.

Before, when Jessie had confessed to Grant, she'd become a shell of herself, thinking she didn't have a right to fight for him, for her marriage, for her family.

This time, Jessie fought. She made him talk to her, even if she didn't want to hear what he had to say. Instead of crying endlessly and telling Grant she loved him, she
showed
him—she stopped by his job site on the hottest day of the year with a cooler of Gatorade for him and his crew. She re-created their first date on their anniversary, right down to the dress she wore, which she had miraculously kept and did a three-day juice cleanse that nearly killed her to fit into it. She challenged him to stay. Yes, for the girls and Lucas. But for her too—reminding him that they had both given up a bit on their marriage. Grant may not have cheated, but he'd let Jessie believe she wasn't important anymore. So she asked him not to let the biggest mistake of her life define her, or define them.

The initial shock of her betrayal hit him the same way it had last time. He grabbed the same duffel bag and
haphazardly moved out. They even legally separated and lived apart for almost a year and a half. Even though they were in therapy once a week at Jessie's insistence, there were times she was sure they'd never reconcile. It was messy and complicated and sometimes even ugly. She'd often jog to her car after and simply rest her head on the steering wheel until she felt strong enough to go home to her kids. Then Grant had met Janet, all over again, just as he had before, in a coffee shop. Only it was much, much sooner. When he'd told Jessie maybe they should start dating other people, her heart folded in half and she'd panicked—was this it? Would Grant meeting his future wife ruin any chance he had at reconciling with his current one? She wasn't about to find out. She'd shown up at his apartment late one night.

“I don't want to live in limbo anymore. Either forgive me and we try to move on, or file for divorce. I
can't
take back what I did. But I
can
spend the rest of my life showing you that you can trust me.”

Grant raked his hands through his hair. “I want to believe you, Jess, I really do. Why do you think I haven't filed already? We built a life together and I don't want to throw it away.”

“Then don't,” Jessie pleaded.

“I think I can forgive you. Maybe I already have . . .” He trailed off.

Jessie's heart lurched. She'd been waiting to hear Grant say those words for so long but she could feel his hesitation. “But?”

“But,” he repeated slowly, “how can I be sure you won't do it again?”

“Because I won't!”

Grant offered her a sad smile. “How can I stop my mind from wondering every time you go away with the girls or you
smile at a dad in Lucas' class. I can't live like that.” He shook his head.

Jessie wrapped her jacket tighter around her nightgown. “I get that, Grant. I do. But promising you won't be enough. You have to let me
show
you that our marriage will be my priority; that I won't step outside of it; that I won't hurt you again. So you either choose to take a leap of faith with me or you don't. It's that simple.”

Before he could answer, she took her own leap of faith and did something she hadn't done in almost two years—she'd kissed him. And to her surprise, he'd kissed her back, both of them realizing they needed that physical connection again more than they could have known. And then he came home. And eventually, he forgave her. The time in between was almost unbearable, but his forgiveness appeared fast and furious, and Jessie exhaled for the first time in what felt like years.

Unfortunately, Peter's wife didn't feel the same way. Cathy asked him to move out the day after he confessed. Peter could only afford a sparse condo across town, but he said he felt good knowing his son, Sean, could still live in his home.

Telling the twins that Lucas had another father was almost as heartbreaking as telling Grant, the blind trust they'd always held for their mother shattering in an instant. They were angry, and Jessie couldn't blame them. They either gave her the silent treatment or said terrible things Jessie prayed they didn't mean. Jessie would call Claire for advice and she guided her.
Don't let your guilt dictate your choices. Stand strong. You made a mistake, but you're still their mother.
So Jessie had done just that, and eventually they got on the right track, especially after Grant moved back in.

When they felt Lucas was old enough, Jessie, Grant, and
Peter told him the truth together with the help of a counselor. And Lucas eventually came to accept that although his situation might be a bit different from his friends', he had two dads who loved him. Grant, as much as he resented Peter for the betrayal, was grateful for Lucas, and didn't want to deny Lucas his biological father. Grant and Peter never became friends, but they tolerated each other for Lucas' sake. And that was more than enough for Jessie.

Soon after Jessie and Grant had officially reconciled, Claire and Jessie had taken their kids to the beach. As they leaned back in their folding chairs and watched Emily and the twins burying Lucas in the sand, Jessie had asked Claire if she thought it was fair.

“Is what fair?”

“That we got a second chance. Most people don't. They have to live with the consequences of their actions. Is our karma going to be all screwed up now? Are we going to die in some freak accident?”

Claire tipped her sunglasses down her nose. “I told you not to watch that stupid movie!”


Final Destination
? I had to!”

Claire shook her head. “I don't get your fascination with horror movies.”

Jessie rolled her eyes. “Will you listen to me, please? I had a nightmare about this last night. What if the universe is going to punish us in some way? For not having to pay the price everyone else does?”

Claire took a sip of her water before answering. “I don't know, Jess. I think we've faced plenty of demons in this life too.” She nodded toward Lucas, the girls begging him to stop putting sand in his mouth, then giggling when he didn't. “You fought like hell
for your marriage and your family. You had to sit your daughters down and tell them you had a baby with another man. You had to face the rage of that man's wife.”

“I did.” Jessie took a deep breath. It had been incredibly difficult, but confronting her secrets had been her penance, and the only way to truly start over. “And you still lost your mom all over again.” Jessie squeezed Claire's hand. “And Gabs never did get her baby.”

“I've thought about it a lot. And I think the point of going back to that year wasn't to make everything perfect. It was to learn how to face things head-on, instead of running from them or hiding from them.
Every single secret
we held came out. And you know what? We're all stronger for it.” Claire paused, thinking about Mona again. Even though it was devastating to go through her death a second time, she wouldn't have given up having that year with her again for anything. And she got to fix the mistakes she made with Emily, giving her daughter the life she always deserved.

“Did you guys start the festivities without me?” Jessie's voice rang out from inside. She watched as Lucas barreled toward the pool and dove in, Gabriela laughing as water sprayed her. Jessie dumped all her purchases except one on the counter and grabbed a pitcher of mimosas from the fridge, while Grant helped Madison and Morgan pull plastic cups from the cupboard. Morgan's blond hair had recently been chopped off into an asymmetrical bob, yet another new haircut in a matter of months, but Madison's was still long and parted down the middle, the way it always had been. The girls remained so similar to the way they'd been as little girls—Morgan outgoing and direct, never mincing words to make her point, Madison more reserved, saving her voice for when it would be impactful. But
both laughed and rolled their eyes when their father teased that he should make them a virgin cocktail, even though they were twenty years old and the legal drinking age in Mexico was eighteen.

BOOK: The Year We Turned Forty
6.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Teach Me Under the Mistletoe by Kay Springsteen
Just What She Wants by Barbara Elsborg
Devastating Hate by Markus Heitz
Geek Heresy by Toyama, Kentaro
Exile's Gate by Cherryh, C J
Clarke, Arthur C - SSC 04 by The Other Side of the Sky
Port of Sorrow by McKenzie, Grant
Worth the Risk by Savannah Stuart