by Marie Sexton
But rarely happy.
The third time he’d called, I hadn’t answered.
“I have to take this,” I said to Leila.
She cocked an eyebrow at me in obvious disbelief. “It’s him, isn’t it?” I didn’t need to answer. She rolled her eyes. “Tell him to go to hell.”
I hit the answer button. “Hello?”
“We need to talk, Lamar. Please.”
“Give me a minute. I’m in the break room.” It was still midperiod, so the halls were mostly empty. I hurried toward the back door near the teacher’s lot. Outside, the temperature was comfortably cool. The rain had slowed to a drizzle. I stood in the alcove of the door, where I’d stay dry. I leaned against the brick building, hoping it would give me strength.
“Are you there?” he asked.
My hands shook, and I tried to keep my voice steady as I said, “Yes. Okay. I can talk now.”
“I’m glad you answered. It’s so good to hear your voice.”
“Yeah,” I said weakly. “Yours too.” Because goddammit, it was true. No matter how angry I was at him, hearing his voice was like a balm on my wounds. A treacherous lump began to form in my throat.
“How have you been?” he asked. “I’ve been worried. All the rain you’re getting—”
“How do you know about the rain?”
“I check the forecast every day. I keep hoping for your sake, I’ll see a bit of sun.”
“I’m fine,” I lied, although the waver in my voice betrayed me. “What do you need, Jonas?”
“I need to see you. God, sweetheart, I miss you so much. I need you here. I need you home. I don’t think I can live another day without you.”
I sighed. Jonas was nothing if not dramatic. I’d often told him if he decided to give up commercial real estate, he’d have a future in theater. “Have you talked to Olivia?”
“No, but—”
“Will you?”
“Dammit, Lamar, I don’t know. That’s what I’m trying to say.”
“You haven’t done it yet, though.”
“Why would I, when you’re eight hundred miles away and won’t even take my calls?”
“I was there for two years, waiting for you. What was your excuse then?”
“It’s not as easy as you seem to think. Olivia and I have a life together. We have a son—”
“So nothing’s changed,” I said.
“Everything’s changed. If you’d only give me a chance.”
I hung my head. I bit my lip, trying to swallow the tears burning in my throat.
“Lamar,” he said, quieter now. “I miss you more than I can say. Don’t you miss me at all? Even a little bit?”
“Yes.” More than a little bit. I missed him so much it hurt. So much it was all I could do not to get in my car each afternoon after work and start the long drive back to Texas. Because as much as I’d hated being the secret lover, at least I’d had something to look forward to. I’d had those stolen moments to brace myself against. Now what did I have? Bare walls and cold floors and rain that refused to quit. I had evenings where I forced myself to drink tea instead of bourbon, because at least passing out would have offered some reprieve, but the hangover in the morning wasn’t worth it.
I hated that I missed him. But I did. God help me, I really did. “Yes,” I said again. “I miss you.”
“Then come home, for God’s sake.”
I couldn’t stop the tears now. I angrily wiped them away. “Maybe,” I said. Just saying the words—admitting it was possible—caused the knot in my gut to loosen. A sob threatened at the back of my throat. I wanted to curl into a ball and cry until I was worn out. I longed to let the rain wash me away. But barring that possibility, there was only one thing I could think of that would make me feel better.
I wanted Jonas.
I wanted to feel his arms around me. I wanted to feel his lips brush my ear as he reassured me. Things hadn’t been perfect, no. But wasn’t having part of him better than what I had now? At least back then, the gaping emptiness inside me had felt manageable. It hadn’t threatened to consume me. “I’ll think about it.”
“That’s all I ask. We can make this work. I know we can.”
Inside the school, the bell rang, signaling the end of third period. I had five minutes before my next class started. “I have to go.”
“But you really will consider it? You’ll think about us?”
“Yes.”
“Good. I love you.”
“I love you too.”
My chest felt tight and heavy as I ended the call, full of something that might have been despair but might have been hope.
Did I dare go back?
My cheeks were still wet from my tears, but the rest of me was dry. I reached past the shelter of my alcove, feeling the coolness of the rain as it landed in my palm. It made me shiver, but it was real. It made me feel. I stepped out into it, wanting more. I tipped my head back, letting the drops bathe my face, begging it to pour through me. To ease my emptiness and my heartache. To wash away the depression that threatened me anew each and every day.
It did none of those things. When fourth period started, I was shivering and wet. But I was not reborn.
MY CONVERSATION with Jonas haunted me all afternoon. For the first hour or two, the thought of moving home felt like salvation. It felt like it was meant to be. Forget the rain and cold floors and the Affirmative Action Club. Forget my desire to be independent or my need to prove I didn’t need him. To hell with my vow that I’d no longer be kept on the side, second to his wife, waiting for the few minutes he could spare. I’d left him out of some petty desire to hurt him. Maybe I’d succeeded, but I’d hurt me too. I’d ruined the only thing in my life worth having.
Yes, I’d go back to Dallas. Finish this week at Coda Middle School while I packed my bags. Then I’d drive all night. I’d get there Saturday.
I’d run back to Jonas.
The thought of being in his arms again, of allowing myself to give up, let it all go, and let him be my rock made me feel better. I needed that. I needed him to tell me it was going to be all right. We’d apologize to each other and cry together. We’d make love with a passion we hadn’t had together for the better part of a year.
And when it was all said and done, he’d get up. He’d get dressed. He’d kiss me good-bye and go home to his wife. Right back to the five-bedroom house I’d driven past but never been in. To the master bedroom I’d only imagined. The bed they’d shared for nearly twenty years.
He’d have won.
And I’d still be alone.
I barely noticed the rain as I slogged to my car at the end of the day. My briefcase full of papers to grade seemed to weigh a hundred pounds. Each step took more energy than I had, and yet somehow I made it. Somehow I found myself in my car. I stuck the keys in the ignition but didn’t turn them. I stared at the dashboard, listening to the ricochet of water off the roof, feeling that deep, aching hole in my chest widen until I was sure it would swallow everything in existence. I tried to imagine sunshine. The beach. Kids laughing.
Just the thought of it hurt.
Turn the key, I told myself. Drive home. Make a cup of tea. You’ll feel better.
I couldn’t. That simple act required a strength I was unable to muster. Simply sitting here was easier.
Knock, knock, knock.
It took me a second to identify the sound. Leila was standing in the downpour with a newspaper held over her head, looking at me through the window, her brow furrowed with concern.
I hit the button to roll the window down. Nothing happened.
Oh yeah. Need to start the engine first.
I finally turned the key. Once the car was running, I rolled down the window.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
“I’m fine.” She didn’t look convinced. I couldn’t blame her. I’d been sitting in my car, staring mutely at the dashboard for… I had no idea how long. But I wasn’t up for a conversation about it. �
�See you tomorrow.”
The drive home was a blur. Once inside, I dropped my briefcase by the door. I walked to the stove and grabbed the teapot, which seemed to weigh as much as my briefcase. I hauled it to the sink. Then I stood there, staring at the spigot, unable to turn it on, wondering if I even cared about tea. Wondering if there was any point to taking another breath.
I didn’t think there was. I couldn’t think of a single reason to move forward. It wasn’t as if I was suicidal. Not truly. Death was permanent and scary and far too much to ponder. The amount of effort it would have required was mind-boggling. The idea of working so deliberately toward that point of no return appalled me. But to simply be not living? To be gone? To suddenly and inexplicably wink out of existence?
That, I would have loved.
I filled the teakettle, even though the futility of it made me weak. I put it on the stove and turned the burner on. Took a cup from the cabinet. Dropped a teabag inside.
Was going home truly an option?
I contemplated it for an hour and a half, nursing lukewarm tea and grading papers, one eye on the clock. At 5:45 on the nose, I put my work aside. I took out my cell phone and dialed Jonas’s number.
This is the test, I told myself. This will decide whether I go or stay. Because in Dallas, it was 6:45. Jonas would be eating dinner with his family. This was dead in the center of what I thought of as blackout hours, the time when Jonas was out of my reach. The time when I was not welcome, when I became an intrusion on his real life rather than the man he professed to love.
I waited, refusing to count the rings, until I was dumped into voice mail. “Hello, you’ve reached Jonas Martin. I’m unable to—”
I hung up and dialed again. Same result. I dialed a third time.
This time, I did count. He picked up on the fifth ring.
“Are you out of your mind?” he snapped in a low, angry whisper. “Do you know what time it is?”
“We were cut short earlier,” I said calmly. “We need to talk.”
“About what?”
“You said you wanted me to come home.”
“I do. You know I do. More than anything. But—”
“I want to discuss what that would mean.”
“Right now?”
“Why not?”
“I can’t talk now. You know that!”
“Then when, Jonas? Because you say you want me to come home, but I’m not coming back to Dallas until I know things will be different.”
He sighed in annoyance. “I can call you tomorrow—”
“No.”
“Tonight. After she’s asleep. Maybe about eleven your time?”
“Another secret phone call? I can’t wait.”
“What do you want from me, Lamar?”
“You really have to ask? I want you.”
“Honey, I want you too. I miss you like crazy. I think about you every night. But—”
“You’re not listening. I want you all to myself. I don’t want to have to lie and hide and sneak. I don’t want to have to wait until you have an excuse to get away. I want you living in my home. Sleeping in my bed. Taking me to your company functions instead of her. I want—”
“Lamar, I can’t talk about this now. It’s not a good time.”
I kept the phone at my ear and used my other hand to cover my eyes. This was exactly what I’d expected. “There’s never a good time, is there? There’s never a good time to talk about how you’ll never leave your wife.”
“It wasn’t supposed to be like this. We both know that. We were just having fun—”
“Except you didn’t tell me you were married. Not until after….”
“Until after we’d fallen in love. I know. And I’m sorry.”
“Are you? Because when you told me, you still lied. You said you were separated. You said the divorce was all but final.”
“I know it’s been hard. It’s been hard for me too. If you can give me a bit more time—”
“How much? A month? A year? Until Terrence goes off to college?”
“Lamar, I don’t have all the answers.”
“It sounds to me like you do. And they’re the same as they’ve always been: no.”
“I love you. You know I do.”
“Do I?” Because as much as I wanted to believe it, there were times when I felt like little more than a whore.
“Do you really doubt it?”
“What about her? Do you love her too?”
“It’s complicated.”
I laughed bitterly. When had “it’s complicated” become code for “I can do whatever I want, and I don’t have to justify it”? “That’s what you’ve been telling me for two years now. Maybe it’s time to uncomplicate things.”
He sighed again. “I could make an arrangement. My office is starting this bowling league. If I told her I joined, I’d have an excuse for Thursdays.”
I asked for him to commit to me, body and soul, and this was what he had to offer? “Thursdays,” I said, deadpan.
“Yes. We’d have two or three hours.”
“Wow. Just enough time for us to eat dinner before you fuck me and go home.”
“Lamar, don’t be like that. It’s only for a little while. Only until—”
But the spell was broken. “Stop,” I said, cutting him off. Whatever ridiculous notion I’d had that going home was a good move had disappeared, banished by the logical part of my brain. There was a reason I’d left. “Forget it. I’m staying in Coda.”
“Don’t say that. We’ll talk later.”
“There’s nothing left to say. Go back to your dinner.”
“Honey, please—”
“Olivia’s waiting.”
I hung up. I couldn’t believe what a fool I’d been. I couldn’t believe I’d nearly run back to him.
I tossed out my cold tea and poured a cup of bourbon.
I ROSE the next morning feeling as blah and lonely as ever, unable to shake the melancholy Jonas had thrust upon me. My cell phone showed three missed calls in the night. If even one of them had been from him, I might have felt better, but they weren’t. They were all from the same unknown number. I didn’t even bother to wonder which of my students took the time to prank call me every night. I didn’t have the energy
I stumbled into the living room and glanced out the french doors leading into my backyard. The sky was low and gray, but it wasn’t raining yet. I tried to take it as a good sign. Maybe the clouds would burn off later in the morning, and we’d get a bit of sun.
The thought did little to lighten my mood.
I sat at the kitchen table, staring down at my toast, trying to rouse myself for the day. I tried to come up with a single, solitary reason to keep on breathing. The soft but persistent ache in my chest felt bigger than ever. It was like a gaping hollow inside me, swallowing up anything good. Sometimes I’d put my hand on my solar plexus and be surprised to find solid flesh instead of empty air. And yet that vacuum inside me had mass, like some kind of astrophysical phenomenon my college boyfriend would have known about—a blank circle of enormous nothing in my chest making my arms heavy and my legs feel like lead. It filled my head. Sometimes the effort of holding it all inside felt like pressure in my temples. A quiet ache would build in my throat and in the tender spots beneath my ears. I’d realize I was holding my jaw so tight, I could barely breathe. And yet through it all, I forced a smile when faced with my students. I met Leila’s eyes and told her I was fine.
But I wasn’t. I knew somewhere deep in the logical part of my brain, I couldn’t continue in this vein, and yet when I tried to look forward, I saw nothing ahead of me but an endless cycle of days exactly like this one.
I left most of my toast on the plate and headed for the car, briefcase in hand. The wind blew hard, harsh and bitter against my face. I kept my head down, which meant I was all the way to the car before I noticed it.
I stopped dead in my tracks, staring at the old Honda Civic, trying to comprehend what I was s
eeing. “What happened?” I asked, as if the car could answer me. If she could have, she would have been crying. Her windshield and both side windows in the front had been smashed. The shatterproof glass was still in place, but thousands of cracks spiderwebbed across the surface, turning the windshield opaque. The headlights were shattered, the side mirrors lying in pieces on the ground. As if that wasn’t enough, all four tires had been slashed.
I dropped my briefcase on the ground, mind reeling. Who could have done such a thing, and why? And more importantly, what the hell was I going to do?
I pulled out my cell phone and called the principal, Lily Wisnowski, to tell her I’d be late for school.
“Not feeling well?” she asked.
I hadn’t been feeling well for ages, but that had nothing to do with it. And yet somehow, the enormity of the destruction to my car was too big to try to explain in this one phone call. “I have a flat tire,” I said.
“That shouldn’t take you long.”
“Well….”
“You do know how to change a tire?” she asked, teasing.
“I only have one spare.”
“And how many do you need?”
“Um…. Four.”
She was quiet for a moment, and then she said, “You’re telling me you have four flat tires?”
“And a broken windshield.”
“Are you shitting me?”
I’d never heard Lily swear before. I was a bit taken aback. “I can send pictures if you don’t believe me.”