Page 32 of Lifers


  Jordan gave a short, cynical laugh that ended with a gasp of pain.

  “Yeah, I’m fine, Momma. Nothin’ to worry about.”

  There was an awkward silence and Jordan turned his head away.

  “Right,” I said. “I think we should let him rest now.”

  “Of course,” Paul agreed, quickly.

  Gloria just nodded and left the room.

  “Stay with me, sweetheart,” Jordan mumbled, his voice slurring with sleep.

  “Always,” I whispered.

  Jordan had been sleeping for over an hour. All that time, he hadn’t let go of my hand. I sat next to him, watching his chest rise and fall steadily.

  When the door opened, I was surprised to see we had a new visitor.

  “Hello, Torrey.”

  I froze and eyed her warily as she hovered by the door.

  “What are you doing here?”

  “I came to see Jordan. And you.”

  “Really, Mom?” I said, snidely.

  “Yes really, Torrey. To be honest, I’ve been trying to think of what to say to you for a while now. When this happened to Jordan, I realized that I’ve been so…”

  “Hypocritical? Judgmental? Sanctimonious?”

  She gave a small smile.

  “Yes, all of those. Can I come in?”

  “He’s sleeping.”

  “I’d like to talk to you, if I may?”

  I nodded tiredly, and she pushed the door fully open and walked inside.

  As soon as she saw Jordan’s battered body, she gasped.

  “Oh no!”

  I stared at her.

  “Oh yes, Mom. That’s what they did to him. They beat him to the ground, kicked him while he was there then beat him some more. When he was unconscious, they stopped. He didn’t fight back. He didn’t even try to defend himself.”

  “But why?”

  “Seriously? You can ask that question with a straight face?”

  Her expression was confused and full of pain.

  “Since he got out of prison and came back here, everyone’s been treating him like he’s trash, like he deserved this to happen. So guess what? He believed them. He believed people like you who thought he deserved to be punished. Congratulations, Mom. Jordan agrees with you. He thinks he’s a piece of shit.”

  “No! I never … Torrey, no! I never said that!”

  “Oh, come on, Mom! Your big speech to him about your ‘moral obligations’? He chose love, the same as me. And these people,” I waved at Jordan’s bruised face, “they chose hate.”

  She swallowed several times.

  “You love him?”

  “Yes, Mom, I do. I didn’t choose an ex-con just to piss you off, no matter what you think. Jordan is a good person, a kind person, and he makes me happy when he’s not getting the shit kicked out of him because of some twisted sense of honor. And believe me, we’ve already had words about that. Before him, it was just a string of faceless guys. He made me believe in myself, Mom. Because he loves me.”

  “Oh, Torrey! I’m so very sorry. I like Jordan, I do. But I love you. All I cared about was your well-being.”

  I stared at her coldly.

  “Well, that’s just not true, Mom, is it? You cared more about your reputation as the community’s moral guardian. Couldn’t have your daughter screwing the local leper.”

  Her face flushed, and she looked down.

  “I’ve tried to do the right thing by you as well as by my conscience. But I’m not perfect, and I don’t always get it right. I really am sorry about what I said, Torrey. About you, about Jordan. You’re right, it was a bad case of double standards. But I hope you’ll believe me when I say I was worried about my daughter. I was behaving like a mom, not like a priest. I’ve had time to examine my conscience, you might say. I’ve prayed a lot.”

  I rolled my eyes. “Great. Did ya get any good advice this time?”

  “I’m here, aren’t I?” she shot back.

  I had to smile at that. “Yeah, I guess.”

  “So,” she said, slowly. “How are things with you and Jordan?”

  “It was getting really good. We were making plans for the future.”

  “And now?”

  “Honestly, Mom, I want to say we’ll be fine…”

  “But?”

  “But I need him to stop blaming himself for Mikey’s death. I mean, he just let those guys beat the shit out of him. He just stood there. And you know what he said to me? That he was ‘paying a debt’. When does he stop paying? When does he start living his life? For us?”

  Mom sighed heavily and shook her head.

  “Guilt is a terrible burden,” she said quietly, looking up at me. “Believe me, I know.”

  I understood what she was saying. I appreciated it, but it didn’t really help either.

  She didn’t stay long after that. But just before she left, she bent down and whispered something to Jordan. I couldn’t hear what she said, but it felt like she’d made her peace with him. With us.

  Torrey

  “A whole month without sex? Are you fuckin’ kiddin’ me?” Jordan whisper-yelled, his face disbelieving, his eyes hurt.

  I folded my arms.

  “Nope. No sex. Doctors’ orders.”

  I picked up the leaflet we’d been given when he’d been discharged after four days in the hospital, and waved it in his face: What to expect after your retinal surgery. When he ignored me, I pulled the leaflet open and read the relevant section out loud.

  “‘The first week after surgery should be reserved for rest with slow, careful movements only,’” I enunciated carefully. “‘Activity may be resumed after one month, but heavy lifting, for example objects over 20 pounds, as well as strenuous activities should be avoided while the eye continues to heal.’ So basically, Jordan, if your eye isn’t healing properly, you won’t get laid even after a whole month is up. We are not risking your eyesight. You went without sex for eight years—you can manage a couple of months.”

  He’d been home from the hospital for less than half an hour and had already begged me to get naked with him.

  “I mean, jeez! Look at you!” I hissed, not wanting his parents to overhear our intimate discussion. “You’re all banged up, broken ribs and shit! Other than blowing you, there’s not much we can do anyway.”

  His uninjured eye widened and he licked his lips. “Uh, that sounds real good, sweetheart.”

  “No. Freakin’. Way,” I said shaking my head, annoyed with myself for giving him false hope. “God knows what damage you’d do! Having an orgasm is like sneezing. Your ribs would just about kill you, let alone what it could do your eye. Ask me again in a month.”

  His face fell and it was quite a job to keep from laughing.

  He bit his lip, thinking hard.

  “Well, how about I get you off?” he asked, hopefully.

  I hadn’t thought of that. Huh, I had to admit I liked the way his mind worked.

  “That’s a definite maybe, but right now you need to rest.”

  Despite his objections, he was obviously exhausted. I helped him pull off his pants and shirt, trying not to wince when I saw again the mottling of yellow bruises that covered his chest, hips and back. At least the swelling on his face had gone down, but he had to wear a protective guard over his eye for another day, and for the next two weeks at night to prevent him rolling on it or damaging it in his sleep.

  I’d just pulled up the sheets around him when there was a knock on the door.

  “Everything okay?”

  Gloria’s voice was hesitant on the other side, but Jordan frowned.

  “What does she want?” he snapped, not bothering to keep his voice down.

  I shrugged.

  Gloria had started trying to make some more effort toward Jordan since visiting him in the hospital, but I was afraid it was too little, too late. I hoped I was wrong. Hell, Jordan was the most forgiving person I’d ever met, but his temper was worn thin right about now, especially with his parents.
Ironically, it was because of Gloria’s previous attitude to me, rather than what she’d put him through over the last eight years.

  His relationship with Paul was more tenuous, too. He seemed to think his dad had chosen sides by having Gloria back in the house. One way or another, Paul was between a rock and a hard place. I felt sorry for him, but my priority was Jordan.

  I opened the door and found Gloria waiting outside with two mugs of herbal tea.

  “I thought you might be thirsty,” she said. “It’s herbal tea … you mentioned that he shouldn’t have caffeine, so…”

  “Oh, right. Thanks,” I said, accepting the drinks. “Jordan’s going to take a nap now.”

  Her face crumpled.

  “But I’m sure he’ll want to drink this first. Thank you, Gloria. That was very thoughtful of you.”

  Behind the door, Jordan was pulling a face and shaking his head.

  I closed the door again and tried to give him the mug with the thin brew. He wrinkled his nose.

  “I hate this shit.”

  “Shut up and drink it. You’re not getting coffee. Not while you’re trying to rest.”

  He crossed his arms over his chest and looked mutinous.

  “She’s trying, Jordan,” I said, softly.

  He shot me a bitter look. “When did you join her cheer team?”

  “Don’t be a jerk. She knows we’re going to be out of here as soon as your parole is up. She wants to make her peace with you. At last.”

  He sighed heavily. “I know. I just don’t care, and I’m not sure I want that anymore.”

  “Maybe it’s not about what you want,” I hinted. “Maybe it’s about helping her to come to terms with Mikey’s death and everything that’s happened. She knows she’s been a shitty mom for the last eight years, but you said she wasn’t always like that. If all she can manage is to make you a lousy herbal tea, then fine—it’s better than nothing.” I looked at him directly. “It’s better than her hating you.”

  “Yeah, yeah. Okay, I get it. Still fuckin’ hate this. It tastes like piss,” he moaned, taking the mug.

  I smiled, because I knew that meant he’d let her in, eventually.

  The next day my words came back to bite me in the ass. Of course.

  I’d been up long enough to get Jordan some juice and a plate of scrambled eggs courtesy of Gloria. Then I shoved some more pain pills at him and helped to take care of his eye. Just doing all that wore him out, so I left him to go back to sleep while I showered and dressed.

  Paul had headed out to work and Gloria left a note saying she’d gone to the store. I was left to wander around the house by myself.

  I ended up in Mikey’s room. It was less of a mausoleum than it had been, but it still looked as if they were waiting for him to come home. It made me sad.

  I picked up his yearbook and started going through it. I flicked through the photographs, seeing pictures of Mikey on every other page: the football team, the senior prom, prizes for the best smile, the best body and the guy most likely to succeed. He’d also won biggest flirt and biggest party animal. I felt like putting stickers on those pages and making Gloria look at them. But what would be the point.

  Then I saw a photograph that made me pause: Mikey, Ryan and Jordan. Mikey was in the middle and they were all standing with their arms around each other’s shoulders, grinning at the camera. You could see that Mikey and Jordan were brothers. Jordan was the taller, but slighter than he was now. He looked very much a kid. That picture must have been taken just a few months before the accident. The caption said, Best Buddies, 2006.

  My thoughts were interrupted by a knock at the front door. God, I hoped it wasn’t a surprise parole inspection. That was the last thing that Jordan needed. Or me, for that matter.

  But when I yanked it open, it wasn’t anyone from the parole team.

  “Hello, Torrey. May I come in?”

  “What are you doing here, Mom?”

  “Well, after our talk, I felt I wanted to speak to Jordan, too, if that’s all right. I wanted to apologize to him personally.”

  I opened the door wider. “He’s sleeping at the moment. He gets pretty tired.”

  “Perhaps I could wait?”

  I sighed and waved her inside.

  “Yeah, fine. He’ll probably be awake shortly. You want a coffee or something? I can’t drink it in front of Jordan because he’s supposed to be off caffeine for now.”

  She smiled.

  “That sounds wonderful. You always make the best coffee.”

  “Yup, almost a professional,” I said, snippily.

  She followed me into the kitchen while I made a fresh pot.

  “I bet you’re glad to have him … home.”

  I threw a look over my shoulder.

  “I don’t think this is much of a home for him, Mom. For either of us.”

  She hesitated a moment.

  “You could always come to me, to the Rectory.”

  “I’m not leaving him here!” I snapped.

  “I didn’t mean that—I meant you could both come, if you like.”

  I blinked at her in surprise.

  “Really?”

  “Yes, of course. You’re my daughter … and I hear Jordan is going to be my son-in-law—although I can’t see a ring.” She paused when I didn’t say anything. “Is it true?”

  “Maybe, yeah. I just said it to the hospital staff because they weren’t telling me anything, but yeah, he has mentioned it to me.”

  “And?”

  “And I don’t have the highest opinion of marriage.”

  “Oh, I see.”

  I shrugged.

  “I don’t know, Mom. I think Jordan plans on wearing me down until I cave in and say yes.”

  She smiled and her eyes sparkled with amusement.

  “I think he’ll make you a very good husband, Torrey. You need someone to stand up to you.”

  Her optimism was making me uncomfortable.

  I finished my coffee and stood up. “Come on then. Just … don’t upset him, Mom. He’s been through enough.”

  She shook her head. “I just want to talk to him, that’s all.”

  “Yeah well, words can hurt as much as fists,” I pointed out.

  She nodded her agreement, and we made our way up the stairs.

  “Just give me a second while I wake him. If you walk in on him now, he might think he’s getting the last rites.”

  Mom rolled her eyes. “Very funny, Torrey.”

  Yeah, except I wasn’t joking.

  I pushed open the door and walked in. Even though I was used to seeing the bruises, it still hurt to look at him.

  He opened his good eye as I sat on the bed next to him, and he smiled.

  “I sure like this dream,” he said. “Who are you, beautiful?”

  “Ha-ha. If this were a dream, you wouldn’t be all banged up.”

  “And you’d be naked,” he added, winking at me.

  “Rein it in, cowboy. My mom’s outside—she wants to see you.”

  He looked confused for a second, then his anxious look was back.

  “She wants to see me?”

  “Specifically, she wants to apologize to you.”

  “What for?”

  Mom’s head peered around the door. “A few things, Jordan. Quite a few things.”

  She winced as she walked into the room, shocked again as she took in his bruised and battered body, and the eye guard taped in place.

  He mumbled something under his breath and struggled to sit up.

  “How are you, Jordan?” she said.

  “Fine,” he answered, automatically.

  Mom paused. “Well, I’m glad you’re out of the hospital. I was … worried when I heard what had happened.”

  I bit back the remark that was on the tip of my tongue to spit at her. She said she’d come to apologize. I knew I should let her do it.

  Jordan simply stared at her, his face slipping into that cold, unreadable mask.

  Mo
m sat in the wooden chair next to the bed.

  “I owe you an apology, Jordan. As my daughter has so rightly pointed out on several occasions, I have been guilty of double standards. I preached tolerance and forgiveness but didn’t practice it. For that, I’m sorry. What’s happened to you, and I don’t just mean this,” she waved toward his damaged body, “life has been very harsh. I hope you can forgive me for adding to your burden.”

  Jordan looked uncomfortable and glanced at me. I shrugged. Forgiving her was his decision. I already had. Sort of.

  “Yeah, sure,” he said, at last.

  “Thank you,” she said, quietly. “Would you mind if I prayed for you? For both of you?” She glanced at me and smiled. “I’ll make it a short one.”

  “Go for it, Mom.”

  She took Jordan’s hand in hers, and he threw me a panicked look. I shook my head slightly, smiling at his expression.

  “Lord, you are loving and kind and merciful. Create in us today new, clean hearts that can forgive those who have transgressed against us and against you. Restore us all to the joy of your salvation, this day and evermore. Amen.”

  She looked up. “Short, sweet, says it all, don’t you think?”

  “Um, yeah?” Jordan agreed, tentatively.

  I gave her a small smile. “Nice one, Rev.”

  She stayed a few more minutes, asking about our plans for the future. She looked sad when I said we’d be heading out as soon as Jordan’s parole had finished and he was cleared to travel.

  “Will you stay in touch, Torrey?” she asked, her expression resigned.

  “Sure, Mom,” I answered, quickly.

  She nodded but didn’t push it any further.

  After she left, I headed back up to see Jordan.

  “Not so bad, huh?” he smiled at me. “I’m glad you and your momma are speakin’ again. It didn’t set right with me that you were fightin’.”

  I chewed my lip for a while but nodded.

  “Yeah, life’s too short to stay angry at people, isn’t it?”

  We sat in silence, each lost in our separate thoughts.

  The next day Officer Carson came to visit.