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Authors: Jessica Soffer

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Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots (35 page)

BOOK: Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots
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“Wait, I—” Lorca began. Dottie interrupted. I wanted to know what Lorca was going to say, but Dottie had taken over.

“Sweetheart,” Dottie said to me slowly, carefully. “She couldn’t be. You know that.” She was talking to me as if I were the child.

“Wait, I—” Lorca began again, but I cut her off.

“Why, Dottie?” I snapped. Dottie knew nothing. “You have no idea about this,” I said.

“Your baby was born still,” she said as if trying to piece it together herself. “A stillborn baby.”

Lorca covered her mouth.
Wait
is what I think she said but it could have been
what.
I couldn’t be sure.

“Oh, Dottie,” I said. “Shut up. Stop this.” I shook my hand at her, waving her off. “You didn’t know us then. You didn’t know anything about us. And you still don’t.”

Dottie shook her head fiercely, fighting emotion.

“Wait,” I said. Her words were starting to sink in. “What did you say?”

“Joseph told me,” she said. “He never wanted to hurt you. He knew how much you’d been through already. But I thought you knew. I always thought that a mother must know.”

“A mother does know!” I said. “And you don’t. You’re just a neighbor. The nosiest neighbor in the world. Joseph was only nice to you because he felt bad for you, because you were so lonely. You don’t know anything about our child.”

“I do,” she whispered. “He told me.”

The world went wispy, pale.

“You,” I said slowly. It snapped into focus. “He told you. You and Joseph. You knew Joseph. You took him. You.”

“Me,” Dottie whispered, head down.

The word fell flat, like chewed-up gum, and stuck to the floor. The end. I’d thought that my relationship with Joseph could have no more bumps, no more sharp turns. Joseph had lived two lives, but when he died they converged into one. And I wouldn’t know the half of it. The secret had been so valuable, so enormous when he’d been alive but was now just that little word—
me
—barely audible. His life had been closed with a click.
Click.

“Please,” Dottie said. “I’m sorry. It wasn’t what you think. It was nothing. Just a couple of moments. And after the baby, he couldn’t. Everything ended.”

“Stop,” I yelled, but it emerged like a growl from the low, dingy place where hunger lives. “I can’t.”

For just a moment, I didn’t believe her. She made things up. She had to, for attention. She was a sad sack. And yet, the earnestness with which she was looking at me was something I’d never seen before.
Of all the everything ever,
I thought to myself,
this she means to say. She knows this.
She knew Joseph before she knew me. They had a world apart. A world unto themselves. They were them.

 

As the moments went on, the truth continued to braid itself together, one section at a time. Joseph told her. Her. She. Dottie. The sweater. The note. It was her handwriting. I should have known, though I hadn't seen it for years. Nobody makes loops like that but Dottie and teenagers. It was her loop, her note. He was her Joseph. The note had nothing to do with our daughter. I should have known that too. Joseph, if he'd ever met our child, wouldn't have been able to contain himself. Why hadn't I thought of that sooner? He was a good man. He would have kept only the bad stuff from me. He was like that. Still, I could no longer say that if I knew one thing, I knew my husband.

 

And our daughter was dead. I hadn’t known that either. Damn Joseph for never telling me, but that wasn’t all. I was the worst mother in the world. To not know. To not have any sense at all that she was gone. It had never even crossed my mind. I’d never felt it in my gut.

My hands were shaking. My back was sweating. I was freezing. I was broiling. My stomach made a horrible, wailing noise, the sound of death in the walls. I wanted to lie down on the floor and catch my breath. But the sadness would have to wait. All I could muster was anger.

“I can’t,” I said. “I can’t. I can’t.” The phrase fell like sneezes.

“Can’t what, doll?” Dottie said, and she began to get up but I stopped her, looked her right in the face.

“It smells horrible in here,” I said. “It’s making me sick.”

The first thing I felt was not sadness, not even anger, but jealousy—not because of the affair but because of the closeness. Dottie, it occurred to me now,
had
been more reverent than me. She’d kept something of his because she’d cared for him, loved him. I was horrendous, paralyzed by affection, disgusted by grief. I had thrown him away.

All these years, I’d thought Dottie had been the dense one, acting like a fool, being made fun of from all sides. The words
subtle
and
Dottie
belonged in different universes. And yet, she’d been a master of discretion, which somehow made sense too. Every person knows how to whisper. She was smart enough to get attention—why did it never occur to me that she’d be smart enough to sustain it too? I wanted to know what covert name they’d called me. And, worse still, what they had called each other.

Loneliness. Their affair meant that both of them were total strangers—except to each other. I imagined secrets as silent illuminators, visible only to those who knew. When they saw each other, they saw the truth spark around them like fireflies. They glimpsed all the things that mattered. And I knew nothing. That night the photo was taken at the restaurant, I wondered, had she been outside too? Had she been hiding somewhere with her shoes off, the back of her hand against her mouth? Had she watched us from behind as we walked home? Had she hoped that he wouldn’t reach for my fingers? He reached first. He always reached first. Maybe she knew that as well—and she scoffed at the particular kind of thrill that it gave me. I wondered if he scoffed too.

Maybe when I’d looked at him, I thought now, for years and years and years and years and years, all the things I saw were the unimportant, gray things: on the outside, a mere veil of skin, human hair and bones and teeth. And it was on the inside that he was a blushing, rocking, stained-glass thing, full and delicate as a peony, strong and vital as a lighthouse—and all that was them. It gave them joy, sustained them, matured and nurtured them. He was her secret light. She was his. I knew merely the casing of him, and never even knew to peel the damn thing off.

I had no idea where their love began, where it ended. It was resignation I felt as it occurred to me that the details made absolutely no difference. What was was. Joseph was and was no more. It would do no good to fight about what he’d done, discuss it, move on. We couldn’t even try now.

 

“Come on, Lorca,” I said, wanting to get her downstairs, to explain. I wouldn’t put all my stock in Dottie yet. But Lorca wouldn’t look at me. She knew something too. Somehow we were no longer in this together. That much I understood.

“I’m so sorry,” Lorca said. “Victoria, I meant to tell you before. I believed we were too. But we can’t be. I just found out that my mother’s parents died. I just found out too.”

“All right,” I breathed.

I began to back myself out of Dottie’s apartment. I couldn’t look at Lorca. She was completely different to me now. If I’d recognized her from somewhere, it must have been from the bus stop. Or from the neighborhood. Or maybe she’d been one of those schoolgirls I’d been particularly appalled by, one who’d made a scene, flirting, carrying on, outside our bank. I wanted to like her, but what was left? Why should I? We were nothing. She had kept me in the dark. I was a fool. And I couldn’t take care of her, whatever she needed, whatever she needed me for, whatever reason she had come to find me. I didn’t understand it. Didn’t care to. Not now.

 

“Would you like to sit?” Lorca asked and I shook my head. I was at the door. I just had to make it downstairs, but my legs had begun to shake. It felt as though I’d been swimming for days and days.

“How about some water?” Lorca said. She disappeared into Dottie’s kitchen. I needed to rest.

I don’t know how long we existed there, Dottie and I, saying nothing, but the room full of our static. Thoughts ran through my head faster than they had in years but felt distant—it was like being on a plane: the actual speed at which the aircraft moved had nothing to do with the woozy pace of things inside the cabin.

Dottie started fidgeting with her hair, her clothes. She pretended to see something important under her fingernails, which were painted pink. Her robe was flag-colored silk. She had lipstick on her teeth.
Cosmopolitan
was on her coffee table.
See,
I wanted to say to Joseph,
she never could have survived in Baghdad.
And yet, she’d survived the loss of the man she loved. We both had. And that, it pained me to admit, was far more difficult.

“He didn’t want to hurt you,” she said. And then: “Please believe me that neither did I.”

I didn’t care if I fell down the stairs. I left.

 

Soon, Lorca came down and collected her things. I didn’t even get up from my chair to say goodbye to her. I couldn’t bear to look her in the face. As lovely as she’d been, she was no one to me now. I’d put all my eggs in her basket. For a moment, I was sorry for her—that she too was so very, very lost—but then it struck me that it wasn’t my job to find her. She had her own mother, her own dead grandparents, and I had no idea of their story. There was nothing left for us. She’d be another girl on the bus. All girls from now on would be just girls on the bus.

“Wait,” I said, just before she walked out the door. “I think you dropped that the other day.” I pointed to the photo of my not-daughter, which I’d tucked behind a throw pillow.

“Oh,” she said, putting it in her pocket without examining it. She was waiting for me to say something else. When I didn’t, she said, “Thank you. I didn’t mean to leave that here for you to find. I didn’t even know I’d dropped it.”

It only half broke my heart.

“I just found out too,” she said.

I put up my hand for her to stop.

 

Three hours, two glasses of Shiraz, and one very emotional shower later, there was a knock on the door.

“I’m not coming,” I shouted from the couch. The knocking stopped.

Only when I heard her clanking back up the stairs did I manage to get up. I looked through the peephole first. There was no one there. I opened. The air was cold and still, and smelled like burned butter. I looked down. On the floor, folded like a flag on a soldier’s grave: Joseph’s sweater.

Tears poured out like paint when I leaned down to pick it up.

I put it on the couch in his study. I rolled it lengthwise, then folded it in half, tucked the fold into the crook of my arm. I sat down. I sniffed it. It did not smell of Dottie. It was my turn. I cradled it. I waited for emotion to flood in. I waited for a while.

I’d never imagined I’d be left with so many questions, so many answers to questions I hadn’t asked.

It was too late to feel excused for my faults, if that’s what I’d wanted. And the truth was that even when Joseph was alive, it was too late. I’d posed the challenge to him silently, constantly: Love me, despite. Despite my heart of mud, love me. Despite my distrust of New York, love me. Despite my anxiety, love me. Despite my anger. Despite my fear of losing you, love me. Despite what I do not say. Despite what I would not give you, what I wouldn’t do for you, what I stole from you, love me. Despite the way it was so easy for me to give to everything else, nothing to you, because nothing else mattered like you did until the end when I was so sure of you. You couldn’t get out of bed, my love. Love me despite all that. Despite who I was, who I am, love me, Joseph. Let me see you try. Because if you love me hard enough, strong enough, I might just believe that you’ve forgiven me for who I am, the hideous, selfish thing I am. But the truth is, you did that years ago. You found Dottie and did what you had to do so you could love me. Does this mean I can forgive myself? I just want to catch up.

 

Still, no decision is entire of itself. Swindling my husband of his greatest joy was only one part of it. There we were every day, waking up, going to sleep. I was who I was and I was what I’d done, with every living breath, no reprieve. That was the intolerable part. You are the decisions you make. You die with them. And the person you love the most is testament to that.

But now.

Of course,
I thought.
Of course.
I asked him to let go of a child, but in order not to let go of me too, he needed something. He needed support from somewhere. I’d never been a sympathetic listener. I ended hugs too soon. I never liked to be picked up. I’m not sure I allowed myself to be lifted, ever. Not ever. Joseph—he’d been the opposite of that. He found love in the oddest places. And if he had to find love, at least he’d found love with someone who needed it. He was always giving people what they needed.

And he’d done all that for me. He’d let me live with my decision, had saved me from the truth and more pain, the burden of trying to make sense of something that could never make sense, that I could only be sorry for. He didn’t punish me for it. He lived with it too. He loved me, despite me—which, actually, when you think about it, means because of me.

Joseph

N
EW YORK
, 1968

It had been exactly ten years since they’d opened the restaurant. An important occasion, Joseph thought. Something to be proud of. Something to celebrate. Joseph planned a big night. He wanted to get things back on track. Ever since that day at the hospital, Joseph had expected a big shift. Victoria and Joseph. Joseph and Victoria. A pair. A couple. Two birds on a branch. He’d hoped for her to need him. Really need him. And she had, for a short time. But a few years later, they opened the restaurant. And it offered Victoria all the feelings that Joseph had wanted to give her: confidence, focus, happiness. All that he had wanted was funneled away from him and right into the restaurant. It made her giddy. It became everything; everything around them and everything between them. When they slept, he reached for her. She smelled of kitchen, of the burned bits dumped in the trash. She slept soundly, sealed in, heavy as tar. They’d married at City Hall and never made time for a honeymoon. Still, his father always said, “Life without a wife is like a kitchen without a knife.” And in many ways, it was true. Marriage had given Joseph confidence in Victoria—that he wouldn’t lose her and he wouldn’t lose himself, again.

BOOK: Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots
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