5

The thing of it was, she didn’t feel like she was in a strange house. As the twilight came, Susie felt herself drifting back through time. This kitchen, this living room, these halls and these walls, even the vases on the tables and the painting above the fireplace had a certain familiarity. When she closed her eyes and inhaled, she thought she drew in the scents and the aromas of her own home. Not the home she was living in now with Faye, not the apartment on Palm Canyon Boulevard South, but her real home, her home when her mother and her father were alive and they lived in Pacific Palisades.

She noticed the Livingstons’ family albums were still there on the glass-top center table, just as they had been in her own home. Someone always brought out the family albums at times like this, she thought. It was as if he or she were afraid Death would wipe the memories out of their minds, so they had better reinforce them quickly.

But when she sat down and opened the first one, instead of two little boys, she saw a pair of twins, and instead of Sylvia and Tommy Livingston thirty-some-odd years before, at the threshold of their marriage and their lives together, she saw her own parents. She sighed. How young and beautiful they were, how handsome and strong, how healthy and vibrant. Why couldn’t they always be that way? Why did they have to grow old and sick, and why did one of them have to die before the other?

It made her angry. Couldn’t God have figured out a different pattern, something more pleasant for people so in love? Why have something like love anyway, if this was going to happen? While He was at it, He could have prevented all this grief and sorrow with a swipe of His divine hand. Instead, she had to be called upon time after time after time.

She rose and moved slowly through the vaguely lit house, moving like an apparition that had just arrived and was unsure of its haunting grounds. She limped down the hallway and slipped into the bedroom.

Tommy Livingston slept so soundly. He resembled a corpse laid to rest in some funeral parlor. On his back, his nose up, his Adam’s apple prominent but still, his breathing barely discernible, he metamorphosed before her eyes and became her daddy in his coffin. She could even hear the organ music off to the right and behind her.

She moved to him, her hands clutching her handkerchief. The tears were streaming down her cheeks. Vividly recalling, she reached out slowly and put her hand over his forehead. He felt stone cold.

“You’re happier now, Daddy. I know you are. Good night, sweet Daddy.”

She smiled through her tears and removed her hand. She was going to go to her knees and offer a prayer when suddenly the phone rang and shattered her memory like a window pane, the shards of precious images falling all around her.

Angry, she stabbed at the receiver and lifted it before the second ring disturbed Tommy Livingston.

“Hello,” the voice on the other end said when she said nothing.

She reached around the phone and pulled the jack out of the base. The receiver went dead. Then she cradled it and went to her knees, only it was no good. The ringing continued when whoever it was called back. Frustrated, she rose and went out to the kitchen to answer.

“Mr. Livingston’s residence,” she said.

“Huh? Who is this?”

“Susie Sullivan.”

“Susie Sullivan?” There was silence for a moment. “You’re the nurse?” the man asked.

“No. I’m her sister. I was called here to stay with Mr. Livingston.”

“What? Who called you?” the man demanded.

“Mr. Livingston asked my sister to call me. I keep the house clean and care for him during his troubled time,” she explained. “Who is this, please?”

“This is Todd Livingston. Where’s my father?”

“He’s sleeping. My sister gave him something to help him sleep and he’s sleeping soundly, finally,” she said, emphasizing the ‘finally’ so he would make no request to have her wake Tommy.

“Well, if he should wake up before you leave, will you tell him I called?”

“Of course, but Faye said he would sleep through the night now.”

“Oh. Well, do you think I should return?”

“No, that’s not necessary. I’m staying.”

“Oh. Well, call me if you need me. No matter what time. My number’s …”

“I know your number, Todd. My sister put all the important numbers on the bulletin board here in the kitchen.”

“Okay. Thanks.”

“No need to thank me,” she said. “Good night, Todd. Try to get some rest.”

“Right. Good night,” he said.

After she cradled the receiver, she returned to the bedroom to be sure Tommy hadn’t been disturbed. Then she moved quietly through the room, gazing at everything: Sylvia’s cosmetics, combs, and brushes on the vanity table, the pictures on the dressers, the clothing in the armoire and in the closets, and even the clothing in the drawers.

She did the same thing with the rest of the house: walking into every room, inspecting every closet, every drawer, studying every artifact, every picture. She knew where Tommy Livingston kept his rifles and his fishing poles. She knew where the supply of toilet paper was stored. By the time she retreated to the sofa in the den, she knew everything there was to know about this house and its contents, just as she had known everything about her parents’ house.

Satisfied, she made a little bed for herself in the den. Then she got down on her knees, clutched her hands, closed her eyes, and recited her usual nighttime prayer.

“God bless Faye for all the wonderful work she does to help people who are sick, and God bless Mommy and Daddy in Heaven. Amen.”

She took off her brace, snapped off the lamp and dropped herself into the comfortable warm darkness. Nighttime made her snuggle. She whimpered a little like a baby for a moment and then she closed her eyes and envisioned the photographs in the album, only this time the people in them could move and smile and laugh, especially the lovely couple: Tommy and Sylvia. Tommy was so happy, he positively glowed when he had Sylvia in his arms or beside him. And now, look at how unhappy he was.

But Tommy won’t be unhappy long, she thought. No, not for long. Faye had brought her here to help him. And she would.

Tommy Livingston awoke with a start. It was almost as though Sylvia had nudged him. He half expected to hear her familiar “Wake up, Rip Van Winkle.” He turned and gazed stupidly at the empty place beside him in the king-size brass-framed bed. Her place was untouched and cold, her pillow without a crease. None of this had been a bad dream. Sylvia was gone for good.

He sat up slowly, feeling years older than he was, and scrubbed his face with his dry palms. Funny, he thought, how he hadn’t noticed how quiet the house had been with Sylvia in the hospital. Now that she was definitely gone, that silence was emphatic. In fact, if he concentrated, he could hear the whir of the refrigerator motor.

For the moment he couldn’t remember how he had gotten into bed or when he had undressed. His mind was so cloudy. He recalled greeting people after the funeral and then … when did he go to bed? He hated this confusion. Damn it, he thought, shaking his head as if he expected to shake his thoughts and memories loose. Instead he felt nauseous and dizzy and had to lie back again. After he got his breath, he sat up and gazed around the room.

Everything was neatly put away, no garments hanging over chairs, the closet doors and dresser drawers closed, the curtains drawn. When did he do all that?

His gaze went to the telephone and clock on his night table. It was nearly ten o’clock. He had slept that long? He never slept that long. He was a morning person. What surprised him even more was that no one had called to see how he was doing. Where were his sons, his relatives, his friends? Everyone else hadn’t overslept, had they? But when his eyes trailed the telephone wire, he noted that the phone had been unplugged. He hadn’t done that; he would never do that.

He started to swing his legs over the side of the bed when she appeared in the doorway.

“Good morning,” Susie said, smiling. She limped quickly across the room to open the curtains and let in the sunlight. It was so abrupt and the rays were so bright, reflecting off the cream-colored walls and the mirror over Sylvia’s vanity table, that he had to cover his eyes for a moment.

“What’s happening?” Tommy asked. “Why are you here?”

“Oh, I hope you don’t mind,” she said quickly. “My sister called me last night and told me to come over. She had to go home to get some sleep because she’s expecting to be scheduled for private duty shortly.”

“Sister?” He thought, his eyes blinking rapidly. “Oh,” he realized, putting together her limp and her longer hair. He realized also that this woman was dressed in a maid’s uniform and not a nurse’s. “You’re … the twin sister?”

“Yes. My name is Susie,” she said. “I hope you don’t mind my being here.”

“No, I … I’m just surprised to see you,” he said. It began to fall into place … Faye helping him to bed, giving him the sedative. “When did you say you arrived?”

“Last night. I finished cleaning up while you were sleeping, and you were sleeping so soundly, I decided to keep people from bothering you. I hope you don’t mind.”

“You’ve been here all night?” He shook his head, still a bit confused. “I never heard a sound.”

“I unplugged your phone so it wouldn’t ring and wake you, but I took down the names of everyone who called this morning. I have the list in the kitchen.”

“Where did you sleep?”

“On the sofa in the den. It was quite comfortable. I’ve slept on worse sofas and in pretty uncomfortable chairs, believe me.”

Tommy nodded. He started to get up and stopped. She sensed his modesty and went to the closet to take out the robe. He was surprised she knew it was hanging inside the door. She brought the robe to him and he took it without comment, although dozens of questions were buzzing around in his head.

“I’ve got some oatmeal cooking, some juice and some coffee made. I also made some of those breakfast rolls your wife had in the freezer. Faye says you need something hot and substantial in your stomach. Grief wears you down, drains your body,” Susie said.

He nodded.

“I’ll just take a quick shower,” he decided.

“I thought you would. I put a fresh towel in the bathroom for you.”

“Thanks,” he said and continued to gaze up at her. Susie and Faye Sullivan couldn’t be much more than thirty, he thought. Either one could have been the daughter he and Sylvia had so wanted, but it was as if Sylvia’s body had shut down after Todd’s birth. She didn’t get pregnant again for the longest time, and when she did, it was an ectopic pregnancy.

“I’ll get your breakfast together while you take your shower,” Susie said.

He rose and went into the bathroom. After he was freshly shaved and dressed, he entered the kitchen to find his place all set, his orange juice waiting and his coffee steaming hot. She poured the oatmeal into a bowl and brought it to him with a hot roll.

“You want honey or molasses over it?”

“Honey’s fine,” he replied and she smiled, nodding.

“That was the way my father liked it,” she said. She fetched the jar of honey and brought it to him, and then she poured herself a cup of coffee and joined him at the table.

“How is it? It’s not overcooked, is it?” she asked the moment he brought a spoonful to his lips.

“It’s great.”

Susie nodded.

“I like to cook. Faye hates it,” she said. “After our mother died, I did all the cooking for her and my father. Actually, I did a lot of the cooking before she died, too.”

“What did she die of?”

“Heart disease, just like your wife.”

“Everyone seems to think it’s a man’s problem,” Tommy said. “I must say, I was surprised when Sylvia had a heart attack.”

“Faye says that’s a common misconception,” Susie remarked. “Especially now that women smoke more than men and eat the same fat-filled diets.” She blew on her coffee for a moment, her eyes fixed in a blank stare.

“You said there was a list?”

“Pardon?”

“Of people who had called?”

“Oh, yes.” She rose and returned to the counter to tear a page off the notebook by the phone.

“Wow,” Tommy said. “This many calls and I slept through all of it.”

“Faye said she gave you a powerful sedative to be sure you got a good night’s rest.”

“Yeah, I remember now. Something of Sylvia’s, she said. I don’t take sleeping pills as a rule.”

“I’m sure Faye thought you needed them. She wouldn’t give anyone pills if she wasn’t positive. She hates to overmedicate and she’s very critical of doctors who prescribe pills like candy,” Susie said.

Tommy smiled at the vehement way Susie defended her twin sister.

“I guess you two are pretty close, being twins and all.”

“We’ve always been close, even when Faye was away at college. We look after each other.”

Tommy smiled.

“With all that’s going on in this rotten world, that’s nice to see nowadays. Too many of the younger generation are into themselves,” he remarked.

Susie picked up on it quickly.

“Faye says the generation gap just seems to be growing wider and wider. Different values, different priorities.”

Tommy nodded. These were almost Sylvia’s exact words.

“Both you and your sister seem very wise for women so young,” he said.

“Faye and I side with the older generation more often than not, which is why we both work so much and spend most of our time alone.”

“Neither of you has been close to being married, then?”

“Faye was once … with a young doctor,” she replied.

“What happened?”

“He had a tragic accident … he took too many uppers to keep working and crashed in his car.”

“Oh. That is sad. But how about you? You’re just as pretty,” Tommy remarked. She was. She had the same beautiful eyes, the same rich-looking hair and complexion and just about the same figure. Big deal, so she limped, he thought.

“Every time I measure a prospective boyfriend against the man my father was, a man like you, he comes up short. I just won’t settle for anyone less,” Susie added firmly.

Tommy smiled.

“Well, you’re a very pretty and a very nice person, so the man who finally wins your heart is going to be a very lucky man,” Tommy said.

Susie didn’t smile. Her eyes suddenly turned cold and her lips firm.

“I’m not optimistic,” she said. “And besides, when I see how much it hurts to lose the one you love, I’m afraid I hesitate to get too involved. It’s a horrible paradox. The more you love someone and he or she loves you, the harder it is to face life without him or without her.”

Tommy just stared up at her. He didn’t know whether to feel sorry for her or admire her. Was she better off with this attitude? He certainly couldn’t disagree with her description of the pain accompanying the loss of a dearly beloved.

“I know how much you’re going to miss Sylvia,” she said, “even though you’re the strong, silent type. Just like my father was,” Susie said wagging her head. “Men think if they keep their sorrow inside and let their tears fall behind their eyes, they’re more manly and it hurts less. But the truth is, that hurts more. It pulls and pulls at your heart and wears you down until you feel just like you do right now. I bet I could blow you over like a feather,” she said.

Tommy smiled.

“Maybe you could.”

“Of course, I could. Keep eating, Mr. Livingston, even if it’s just something you do mechanically.”

Tommy nodded and lifted the spoon.

“Yes, ma’am. I guess I do need someone like you around right now,” he confessed.

“Of course you do. It’s what I do best, too.”

“Oh? And what’s that exactly?”

“Help grieving people deal sensibly with their grief. Faye says it’s a logical thing for a nurse’s sister to do, when you think about it. For hours and hours after she returns from her nursing work, she talks about her patients and the doctors and all that goes on. I’ve learned a lot about medicine and treating people just by sitting and listening to her.

“And what is grief? Grief is like a sickness, like a disease. It debilitates, tears down the body, has symptoms like … like the flu. It fatigues you, ruins your appetite, fills your stomach with butterflies.”

“Yeah, I suppose you’re right,” Tommy said, impressed with how vehemently she spoke about it. He ate some more of the oatmeal and drank some of his coffee.

“Grief over a lost loved one, especially a wife, turns grown men such as yourself into little boys again,” she continued. “Our daddy was like that. It got so I had to remind him to brush his teeth. I stood over him and forced him to eat, just like I’m hovering over you and forcing you to eat. He became forgetful, too, and left things everywhere.”

“Sounds like he was quite along in years when your mother passed away.”

“No. He was your age. Don’t underestimate what’s happened, Mr. Livingston. Your wife was a much bigger part of your life than you realize even now.”

Tommy stared at her for a moment. She looked so confident and sounded so positive. He began to wonder more about this young woman. Where were she and her sister from? How long had they been in Palm Springs? What sort of a childhood had she and her sister had?

“You’re from L.A.?”

“Pacific Palisades, originally, but Faye and I have lived in a lot of places.”

“Don’t say? You seem too young to have lived in too many places,” he said.

“Faye’s work has taken us all over the country.”

“How long you been here?”

“A few months. I like it here,” she said quickly. “My father would have liked it here, too.”

“What happened to him? After your mother’s passing, that is.”

“He …”

“Yes?”

“Took his own life eventually,” she said and looked away. She sighed and turned back to him with a soft smile. “It was sad, but I understood.”

Tommy continued to gaze at her for a moment. He had half suspected something like this.

“How did he …?”

“He swallowed a bottle of sleeping pills. But when Faye and I found him …”

“Yes?”

“He was smiling. My mother must have been waiting for him, don’t you think?”

For a long moment, Tommy said nothing. Then he shook his head.

“I’m afraid I don’t believe in much after this life,” he replied finally.

Susie was devastated. She sat back aghast.

“But if you don’t believe in anything after … how will you ever …”

Tommy looked up sharply.

“Ever what?”

“Be with your wife again?”

“I don’t expect I will,” he confessed and rose from his seat, obviously anxious to end this topic. “Thanks for preparing my breakfast. I’d better go call some of these people back,” he said referring to the list. Susie watched him go to the den to use the phone and then she rose slowly.

“It’s just his way of dealing with his sorrow,” she muttered. “He didn’t mean it. Daddy would never have said anything like that.

“Never.”

She brought the dishes to the sink and thought for a moment. Then she turned and stared angrily after Tommy Livingston.

“She’s waiting for you. You can’t leave her waiting. You won’t,” she vowed, and she vigorously sponged down the bowl, the glass, and the cup as if Tommy Livingston had some infectious disease. “You won’t.”