Friday
That Tuesday at the sidewalk café when I tossed an unknown element into that girl’s crisis to change the course of her day, the blue car that I’m on my way to find right now was still months away. Even then, though, its phantom engine was revving out there in the yet-to-be. If I’d known to cock an ear that evening, or even on the day I’d found the stash of bank statements, I might have heard it in the back of my mind where the future sows its seeds.
• • •
I never thought we were miserable. I really didn’t. I kept careful watch that we were being normal, and every little spat and eye roll seemed to fit under that heading. In some small ways, even the squabbling felt like a triumph. We fought, but we stayed. I never asked him to change. I accepted him. I thought that was what I was supposed to do.
Then I looked up one day to find that the friendly, nearly conspiratorial glint in my husband’s eye had transformed into the flat stare of a bored coworker. And of course it hadn’t gone stale overnight. We’d made a project of it, the both of us plying the excuse of “I’m just tired” so often in our listlessness that it had turned into a secret code for the pointed exercise of neglecting each other. We had lost track of our alliance.
But Patrick still had his dimples and his hair, and if I skipped dessert four nights in a row, I could still fit into the blue jeans I had worn in college. In our careers, we’d both been the meat that was just this side of the fat, which had kept us both—more or less—off the corporate chopping block at the low swing of the economic cleaver. There weren’t bonuses and overtime projects anymore, but we were employed.
Money had got tight, but we were doing okay.
So what did we have to complain about? Nothing. Everything. Just like everyone else. And being just like everyone else meant more to me than anything the blinders had blocked from my view.
• • •
“Why do you put up with this shit?” asked my brother after I’d discovered the first pebbles that would become an avalanche in my marriage.
Before the big things that were importantly disastrous, there were the slippery, subtle, little things. There were upsets and fusses, but of what I thought of as the normal, modern-day, first-world brand of problems. And those were, of course, the only sort I would ever entertain.
Patrick’s hidden bank account, his secret stash of his-not-mine, was the first decoded clue. Half a year later, his second-tier flirting with Deirdre from the coffee kiosk in the grocery store nipped at our peace. It wasn’t a big deal. They were just texts. Light innuendo among a steady stream of unnecessary details to be sharing with each other.
But each stone that tumbled from my fortress sent me running for the wine and a debrief with Simon. I hadn’t confronted Patrick over the money or even asked about Deirdre, nor would I ever, but we were snarling at each other with exhausting regularity.
My brother safely held most of my secrets (and some of Patrick’s as well) because he had simply never shown the inclination to do anything else with them. My brother was an angel. I looked at him now, sitting there growling at me in my own kitchen, tall and ox strong, his eyebrows bristling in irritation. But what I always saw first was the gallant little brother he’d always been.
I pulled back on the smile that might offend him. “Because it’s normal. It sucks, but it happens sometimes.” I poured the rest of the wine into his glass.
“That’s shit, Dee. It’s shit of you to believe it, and it’s shit of you to just accept it if that’s what you actually do believe.”
“Couples fight. They bicker. They have a peek at the green grass over the fence, sometimes, right? That’s all it was. He didn’t actually do anything with her. Life goes on. You might even know that if you ever got out of the best-behavior phase with a girlfriend—even once. What’s your record, like three months? A season and a half, maybe?”
“Yeah, your husband’s a jerk because I’m single.”
“No, but life doesn’t happen in a vacuum is what I’m saying. There’s stuff and sometimes stuff gets complicated. And depressing. That’s why he’s being—that’s why he’s sometimes being a jerk. He’s depressed. He’s stressed-out and he’s making some mistakes.” I took a sip from Simon’s glass, as mine was empty.
He glared at me, then looked away through the kitchen window, disgusted.
I shrugged. “What? Should I just throw in the towel? This money thing is just how he grew up—always barely scraping by. It’s a security blanket, I think. It makes sense. And now Patrick wants children. He’s not wrong. We started talking about it ages ago. It’s probably time. And it’s normal. I know he can’t very well be mad at me over it, but that it hasn’t happened yet after all the articles we’ve read and with us counting the days for timing—”
“Yeah, yeah. I get it. Please.” Simon warded off any more words with his palm in my face. “You’re still my sister, and I really don’t need to think about you and Patrick timing—things.”
“Anyway, it’s grating on him. His rational mind has agreed to schedule things, but maybe his ego hasn’t. He just needs to feel, you know, potent. He wants to know that he’s still got it.” Neither Patrick nor Simon knew that I was swallowing birth control pills on the sly, every evening, just in case the timing of things actually worked. My mother never knew the chain of thought she’d kicked off with one comment about the merits of accidents over of course.
“Then he should go to therapy. Or get a dog. Or make birdhouses, for God’s sake. Or how about he adjusts his nuts and acts like a grown man instead of sending flirty texts to the coffee-shop girl to distract himself ? That’s just obnoxious. And he’s got the stones to siphon money off the bank account? Just leaving you would be better than all that sneaking around if he can’t cope with life. I’d respect him more.”
“Well, there you go.” I smiled mildly at my fuming brother. “Thanks for that. Your clarity is . . . what? Refreshing? I guess we should bury my marriage before it’s even cold. And anyway, maybe that’s what he’s gearing up for. Maybe he will leave me someday. Then you’ll respect him, and I’ll, I don’t know, I’ll get a cat.”
I hated saying it out loud, hated the slithery fear that floated up through my head. My hard grip on the image of how things should be was not, for all my willfulness, holding my world to its place. But my face didn’t betray my slipping hold. My face, at least, I could still manage.
Simon slapped his palms on the tabletop, scaring the salt and pepper shakers, but not me. “You’re not even upset.”
“It’s not about being upset. It’s just the way it is. I’m trying to handle it maturely. Like a normal person. And Patrick’s still trying, you know. He is. He brought me flowers. See?” A mild bundle of dyed carnations and wilting Peruvian lilies staked out a little hopeful spot on the counter.
I didn’t tell Simon that the floral department was right next to Deirdre’s perch at the coffee kiosk. I wondered if Patrick had timed his flower buying for her absence.
“And we’re going to the movies tonight,” I added.
Simon remained unimpressed.
“I only wish I didn’t know,” I said. “I wish she hadn’t programmed us—”
“Oh, here we go. God, Dee, give it a rest.”
My mother would have understood. Whatever frost I felt when I hid my troubles from Simon’s plain sight, there was also the tingle of alert that began heating up my blood. And I didn’t hate it, but I hated that I didn’t hate it.
In those early days, the signal was like the far wail of a siren. I could feel trouble in the near distance. But at turns, I’d reel with a swell of something less like concern and more like possibility. Then I’d have to reaffirm to myself that, no, damnit, I didn’t want anything other than what I had chosen.
Then I’d look to Patrick and funnel my mood back to admiration of him—his long, rolling stride and easy laugh. Not too much; not too little. He’d catch me staring at him with a gleam of appreciation in my eyes, and he’d do that thing he sometimes did in a long look, like tossing a pebble down the well of my expression, waiting for the depths to echo back some inscrutable tone he so often seemed to expect, something that felt long overdue. But then I’d just wink, cutting the transaction short, reeling him in, and also myself, bypassing all the high-minded analysis in favor of a roll in the sheets.
But life is in the blood, whether it’s warm or less so, and I had to admit to both life and blood pulling against my blue-ribbon stubbornness.
Keeping tepid had become a chore.