Excerpt from It Happened to Us

ONE

March 29, 2012

12:59 p.m.

Mathieu Delacroix stared out the kitchen window into the backyard, something he’d done for years while he washed the dishes or finished a cup of coffee, but today wasn’t like any other day. The last time his life had changed this drastically, he was six and disco was all the rage. Now he was forty-one and pretty much listened to whatever radio station his wife or daughter picked. He was dressed in his best black suit, waiting for Lori-Anne to come down. Outside, the grey sky hung low and menacing. Fitting for a late March funeral.

Monday’s car accident had changed everything. How could it not? Things like this happened to other people. You heard it on the news but tuned it out. It was easy to dismiss. It wasn’t personal.

But this time it was.

The grandfather clock in the living room bonged the hour and he checked his watch. They were running late. His gaze shifted to the enormous bouquet of flowers sitting in a vase on the kitchen table. He couldn’t remember who had given it to them. The last three days had been a blur really, a nightmare that made his heart feel like it had been hacked by a butcher. He loosened the knot of his tie but his chest still hurt, his lungs struggling to draw in enough air. He grabbed the edge of the countertop and waited for the moment to pass.

Once it did, Mathieu took a glass from the cupboard and filled it with water. He drank half of it and poured the rest down the drain. In one swift motion, he hurled the glass across the room.

“What happened?” Lori-Anne said from the top of the stairs. “Matt? Is everything all right?”

“Yeah. I dropped a stupid glass.”

“Are you cut?”

“No, I’m fine. We should go.”

“Be down in a minute. Just need to put my lipstick on.”

Mathieu took his jacket off and put it on the back of a chair. Long ago he’d worn suits to work every day, but when Nadia was born he’d traded his dress pants and jackets for work shirts and carpenter’s pants. He’d once been a very good copywriter but he’d been happiest staying home to raise his daughter and work in his woodshop. Nothing beat the sweet fragrance of fresh cut oak or mahogany.

Mathieu rolled up his sleeves, took the broom and dustbin from the pantry, swept the debris off the floor and dumped the broken glass into the garbage can. He then stood by the patio door, wondering what he’d do with the massive swing set he’d built fourteen years ago. Nadia had spent afternoons playing on that thing, going up and down the slide, hanging from the monkey bars, asking him to push her higher and higher. At the top of the structure was a small tree house where she’d spent most of her childhood, imagining a boat navigating rough seas, an airplane taking her to faraway places, a spaceship exploring the universe. She hadn’t played on it for years and now it just reminded him how quickly life can change.

The phone rang. He stared at it but didn’t bother to answer. Probably not for him. The only family he had were his grandparents, and he’d meet up with them at the funeral home.

He glanced at his watch. 1:06 p.m. They really needed to get going. He was about to call Lori-Anne when he heard heels coming down the walnut stairs. She wore a black pant suit and black boots, a matching clutch, no jewelry and no earrings. The only accessory was her two-tone round bracelet watch that she always wore. At forty-three, she was just as striking as when he’d met her twenty years ago. Her hair was shorter now, just down to her shoulders, a golden brown hinting at grey. But it was her piercing light green eyes that weakened him. That, and a laugh he’d always thought of as delicious, sweet, and tasty like dark chocolate.

“You look handsome,” she said. “I always liked you in a suit.”

“This is one suit I’d rather not be wearing. Who was on the phone?”

“My mom.”

“Checking up on us?”

“Worried about us.”

They stared at each other for a moment and then Mathieu turned away, swallowing a reply he’d later regret if spoken. He looked out at the silver sky.

“It looks like it might storm,” he said.

“I hope it holds until after the service.”

The service? He hated that word. It was a funeral, for god’s sake. “Rain seems appropriate.”

“I’d prefer not to get soaked when we go . . . when we go to the gravesite . . .”

For the first time since the car accident, Lori-Anne lost her composure. She rarely showed that side of herself. Lori-Anne often told Mathieu how hard her father had pushed her so that she, being the youngest and the only girl, would be as tough as her three brothers.

Surprised, Mathieu took a few quick steps around the kitchen table to hold Lori-Anne in his arms. The smell of her perfume reminded him of the backyard’s perennial garden he tended during the summer. It was still under a foot of snow.

“Sorry,” she said, pulling away. “I’m probably a mess. Let me fix myself.”

Mathieu watched her go into the powder room. He wanted a drink – a few shots of whiskey to get through the day. He went to the living room and opened the liquor cabinet. Just a shot. Half a shot. He could feel his breathing get heavier. He forced himself to turn away. To his right, a classic leather sofa showcased dark burgundy carved legs that matched the coffee and end tables, a décor that made the room feel pretentious and stuffy. He rarely spent time here, except when they entertained. And there hadn’t been much of that lately. Lori-Anne worked long hours and he was either in his woodshop or in the den, mindlessly surfing the net. Every now and again he tried to work on the novel he’d started years ago, but his writing had become rusty, his BA in English literature belonging to a past that no longer mattered.

His gaze wandered to the mantel above the fireplace where a picture of Nadia was nestled between an engraved china plate from their wedding and a huge candle that Lori-Anne liked to light in the evenings. Nadia had loved the sweet, wild berry aroma.

Lori-Ann had not lit the candle since the accident.

Mathieu took the picture in his left hand. It shook, just a bit. He stared at the photo as if he could will Nadia back to life. With his right index finger, he traced the contour of his daughter. She was five, top front baby teeth missing, wearing a pink sleeveless vest over a pink long-sleeved shirt. They had walked around Pink Lake in Gatineau Park that day, and Nadia found this huge log camouflaged by coloured leaves. She sat on the fallen tree and flashed him her best smile when he pointed the camera at her.

That toothless grin was a sprinkle of cinnamon over his heart.

Mathieu put the frame back where it belonged on the mantel. He took a step back, the sharp edges of memory raking his gut. His eyes began to sting.

The grandfather clock ticked away, each passing second a mockery. It stood tall and defiant by the archway, too big, its presence overwhelming, like his father-in-law. A wedding gift from Lori-Anne’s parents he’d never liked. When they got back from the funeral he would move it to the garage, until he could get GOT-JUNK to come and pick it up.

He’d toss out the furniture too. He could build his own. After all, he was a carpenter and people paid good money for his work. He could see a tall oak bookcase fitting nicely against the far wall, a couple of new picture frames of Nadia to hang on either side. One picture when she was a toddler and then a more recent one, to show the changes over the years. She’d started to look more and more like Lori-Anne, but with his blue-grey eyes. He was probably biased, like any parent, but Nadia had become stunning and he knew that boys must have noticed.

“I’m ready,” Lori-Anne said as she came to stand beside him. When she wore heels, they were practically the same height. “What are you thinking?”

Mathieu shrugged. “This room needs a change.”

“Really? Why?”

He took a moment. “Reminds me of my great-aunt Florence’s living room where kids weren’t allowed to go. She might have been my grandfather’s older sister, but they were so different.”

“I find this room charming, a touch of class inside our modern home,” she said. “But we can talk about it later.”

“Sure.” He glanced at his watch. “We better go.”

He locked the front door and they made their way to Lori-Anne’s Pathfinder.

“Guess the rain isn’t going to wait,” she said, feeling a few drops. She climbed into the passenger seat. “Did you bring an umbrella?”

He nodded and started the SUV. “Maybe if we’d gotten rain on Monday instead of snow and freezing pellets, you wouldn’t have had that accident.”

Lori-Anne turned to stare out the passenger window.

Great! He’d said the wrong thing, again. He wasn’t blaming her. It was just a statement he knew to be true, that if it had rained the accident wouldn’t have happened because she was a good driver. The word sorry was on the tip of his tongue, but he’d said it so much over the last three days because of their arguing, that it no longer had any meaning.

Mathieu pulled out of the driveway and headed for the funeral home. The silence was uncomfortable so he turned on the radio and was surprised to hear Live 88.5. That was Nadia’s radio station, not Lori-Anne’s. Their little girl had gone from Justin Bieber to Nirvana disciple in the course of a few months.

And now, she was gone.

* * *

Find out how the story of Mathieu and Lori-Anne concludes in It Happened to Us: