Page 28 of Distant Shores

Page 28

 

  There were two empty chairs at the table.

  Elizabeth could have done it; she knew that suddenly, certainly. She could have tilted her chin up and walked through the whispering crowd and taken her single place at that double opening.

  But why?

  This wasnt her life. It was the one shed taken on by default. The by-product of Jacks life. That was why she had so many acquaintances in this room and so few friends.

  Long ago, when the girls had been small and money was tight and theyd moved to a new town every two years, shed discovered that the quickest way to make friends was to volunteer for everything. Town by town, her pattern had stayed the same. Move in, start volunteering, make fragile friendships, move on.

  In Echo Beach, shed automatically shoehorned her life into Jacks footprint without bothering to question her choices.

  Now she did just that.

  She didnt want to be the woman shed been before. Wasnt that the whole point of what shed done? She didnt want to melt into this crowd, talk about the usual things, and become good-old-Elizabeth, the one to turn to in a pinch. Jacks wife.

  She backed away from who shed been and turned around. Like Cinderella, she ran down the stairs with her shawl fluttering out behind her and got into her car.

  A quick glance at the dashboard clock told her it was six-forty.

  The Passionless women meeting started in twenty minutes.

  She started the car and hit the gas. It was seven-fifteen when she reached the community college.

  Wrapping the shawl tightly around her, she walked briskly through the empty corridors and stepped into the classroom.

  "Elizabeth!" Sarah Taylor said when she walked into the room. "We were afraid you werent going to make it this week. "

  Amazingly, Elizabeth laughed. The welcome was what shed needed. "I got lost. "

  Mina chuckled. "Were all lost, sweetie. Come on in. "

  Elizabeth wound through the circle of women and sat in an empty chair beside Kim.

  Kim didnt smile. "You should have stayed away. This groupll just drag you down. "

  Elizabeth looked at the faces of these women who knew exactly how she felt right now. "Ive been dragging myself down lately. "

  "Really? You look happier," Kim said.

  Before Elizabeth could answer, Sarah started the meeting. "Who would like to begin tonight?"

  To her own amazement, Elizabeth raised her hand. She felt a flash of fear when everyone looked at her. "My husband and I separated. "

  "And how do you feel about that?" Sarah asked gently.

  Once Elizabeth started talking, she found that she couldnt stop. The whole story came tumbling out. She ended with, "Tonight I tried to go back to my old life, but thats not right, either. I need a new life, but I dont quite know how to start. So I came here. "

  Mina leaned forward. "I was thinking about you this week. Maybe Im psychic. " She gave Elizabeth a sad smile. "Anyhoo, yesterday, I was reading the college catalog, looking for classes I could take now that I can drive, and I noticed that a painting class is starting soon. "

  Elizabeth felt a little spark of something. Hope, maybe. "Really?"

  Mina reached into her leather-patchwork handbag and pulled out a floppy catalog. "I saved it for you. " She walked through the middle of the circle and handed the catalog to Elizabeth.

  "Thanks," Elizabeth said, surprised to realize that she meant it.

  After that, the discussion moved around the circle, dipping time and again into the kind of intimacy that was marked by sudden emotion--tears or laughter.

  The only one who didnt speak was Kim. Throughout the whole meeting, she sat stiffly beside Elizabeth, fiddling with a half-empty cigarette pack, snorting derisively every now and then.

  Finally, the meeting broke up. Elizabeth stood around for a few minutes, talking to the women; then she went back to her car.

  She was almost to the parking lot when she noticed Kim, standing off by herself, smoking a cigarette.

  Elizabeth hesitated for a moment. In her previous life, she would never have ventured into another persons pain. She would have kept her distance, been respectful.

  Across the darkness, in the blue-white glare of a streetlamp, she looked at Kim. Their gazes met.

  Elizabeth went to her. When she was closer, she saw tear tracks on Kims pale face. "You want a cigarette?"

  "No, thanks. "

  They stood there, silent, each one staring out toward the parking lot. Smoke scented the cool air.

  "You ever go to the sand castle competition on Cannon Beach?" Kim asked, exhaling smoke.

  "Sure. " She knew the competition well; every local did. People came from miles around to build exquisite, intricate sculptures. Everything from castles to mermaids. Each entry looked beautiful and permanent, but by morning, the sea had taken them all back.

  She understood. Kim had thought, as Elizabeth once had, that marriage was solid ground. But it was all sand. Here one minute, shaped into magical forms, and gone the next.

  Kim looked at her. "Sarah thinks Im scared. That Im afraid to hope. "

  "Were all afraid. "

  "I guess. " Kim tossed her cigarette down and stomped it out with her boot heel. "Well. See you next week. "

  "Ill be here. "

  Kim walked away, got in a pretty blue Miata, and drove away.

  Elizabeth followed her. Out on the highway, their paths diverged.

  Elizabeth drove down the highway. On Stormwatch Lane, she stopped, pulled her mail out of the box, and then continued down the road for home.

  By the time she parked, it was raining again.

  Inside the house, she tossed her shawl on the kitchen table and flipped through the mail. There was a big manila envelope from Meghann.

  She ripped it open. College catalogs fell out onto the table. Columbia. NYU. SUNY. Three of the graduate programs that had accepted Elizabeth all those years ago.

  A Post-it note read: you cant say you dont have time now.

  Elizabeth avoided talking to her daughters. She carefully called during school hours or when swim practice was going on, and left cheerful messages that sounded as if everything were unfolding as it always had. Dad was doing great in New York, lighting up the airwaves; Mom was working hard to get the place ready for renters. Lies that stacked like a house of cards.

  She glanced at the mantel clock. It was one-forty-five.

  Four-forty-five in Washington, D. C.

  Theyd be in swim practice right now. Saturday was the big meet against UVa.

  Coward, Elizabeth thought as she punched in the number. She was so busy devising her pert, upbeat message that it took her a moment to realize Stephanie had answered.

  "Hello?"

  Elizabeth laughed nervously. "Hey, honey, its good to hear your voice. Ive been thinking about you guys a lot lately. "

  "Hey, Mom. " Stephanie sounded tired. "Your uterine-radar must be working. Im sick. "

  "Whats wrong?"

  A pause slid through the line, and in that split second, Elizabeth imagined the worst. Motherhood was like that; it pushed you out on a ledge and then said, Be careful. Dont look down.

  "Dont call nine-one-one or anything. I just have the stomach flu. Everything that goes down comes right back up. "

  "Is Jamie taking care of you?"

  "Oh, yeah, thats her specialty. This morning she said, If you think youre going to puke, aim away from my new shoes. "

  Elizabeth laughed. It was so Jamie. "Im sure youll be back on your feet in no time. "

  "I hope so. Hey, Mom, Im glad you called. I need to talk to you about something. Tims parents invited Jamie and me to go skiing over spring break. They have a place in Vermont. Its the second week in March. "

  Thank God.

  Elizabeth had been worrying about how she and Jack would handle the separation with the girls at home. It was one thing to avoid the truth by phone. It was quite another to lie to you
r children in person. "That sounds great. "

  "Its kind of expensive. Lift tickets--"

  "Your dad can afford it. " Elizabeth winced. She should have said We can afford it.

  "Itd be the first spring break we havent come home. Are you okay with that?"

  Sweet Stephie, always worried about hurting peoples feelings. Elizabeth had a sudden urge to say, Break a few eggs, honey, be courageous, but instead she said, "Ill miss you, of course, but you should go. Have fun. "

  "Thanks, Mom. So, hows it going with the house? You must be going crazy. Every time I call Dad, he sounds so amped about Manhattan. You must really miss him. "

  "I do," Elizabeth said, flinching at her word choice.

  "How much longer will you be in Oregon?"

  "I dont know. Nobody seems to want to live this far out, and we cant leave the house empty. " She glanced down at her left hand, curled in her lap. The diamond ring was still there. Everything about it, her wearing of it, was both a lie and the deepest truth. Looking at it now, all she saw was the lie.

  "So, howre classes going?" she said to change the subject.

  It worked. Stephanie told several funny "Jamie stories" about how her sister had gotten into and out of trouble. "As usual," Steph said, "Jamie caused the social equivalent of a ten-car pileup and didnt even notice. Tim says she needs a rearview mirror to see her own life. "

  Elizabeth laughed. "She gets that from my dad. He never once looked before he leaped. He said it ruined the surprise. " Her voice snagged on the thought: Hes gone.

  "Are you okay, Mom?"

  "I miss him. "

  "I know. Jamies having a hard time with it. She and Grandad were so close. I think its affecting her swimming. And shes not sleeping well. "

  Elizabeth sighed. Her poor little girl. Jamie might be all hard shell on the outside, but inside, she had a soft candy center. "Keep your eye on her for me. Ill call her tomorrow after her physical anthro class. "

  "I tried getting her to see a counselor on campus, but you know Jamie. She told me to butt out. "

  "Youre a good girl, Steph," Elizabeth said. "Do I tell you that often enough?"

  "Yes, Mom. "

  Elizabeth chose her next words carefully. "Just dont forget how to put Stephanie first. Sometimes, you have to be selfish or life can slip through your fingers. "

  "Are you okay, Mom?"

  "Sure. Im just a little tired, thats all. "

  Stephanie was quiet for a moment. In the background, a television was playing. There was a swell of applause. "Is there something you wish youd done, you know, like besides having kids and getting married?"

  It was the kind of question a woman usually came to too late in life, after shed chosen one road and realized it was a dead end. "What makes you ask that?"

  "Im watching this program about a woman who killed her kids. It seems she always wanted to be a policewoman. Like that would have been a good choice. Anyway, the shrink is blabbing about how women sublimate their own needs. He compares it to loading a weapon. Someday: bang. "

  Bang, indeed.

  It would have been easy to deflect, but she didnt want to take the easy way. There were things she should have told her daughters, advice she should have given them. Unfortunately, some truths shed learned too late. "Not instead of; then I wouldnt have had you and Jamie. But in addition to, maybe. I used to love painting. It got lost somewhere along the way. "