Advance Praise for On Grace
“A moving and vibrant debut that packs a sweet emotional punch. You’ll laugh and cry along with Grace as she treads the complicated waters of marriage, motherhood, an unexpected betrayal, and a revelation that changes everything. Susie Orman Schnall is a fresh new voice in fiction.”
–Kristin Harmel, internationally bestselling author of The Sweetness of Forgetting
“Grace is an imperfect woman with a less-than-perfect life, but readers will find themselves drawn to her authenticity and grit.”
–Colleen Oakes, bestselling author of Elly in Bloom
“A telling, touching exploration of modern marriage, fidelity, and friendship, Susie Orman Schnall’s debut is riddled with the little truths that make up the texture of women’s daily lives. Fans of Emily Giffin will relate to this engaging read.”
–Beatriz Williams, internationally bestselling author of A Hundred Summers
“An authentic portrayal of the intricacies inherent in modern relationships. Susie Orman Schnall’s debut is relatable, honest, and insightful. I look forward to seeing what’s next from her.”
–Emily Liebert, bestselling author of You Knew Me When
ON GRACE
a novel by
SUSIE ORMAN SCHNALL
SparkPress, a BookSparks imprint
A division of SparkPoint Studio, LLC
Copyright © 2014 by Susie Orman Schnall
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
Published by SparkPress, a BookSparks imprint,
A division of SparkPoint Studio, LLC
Tempe, Arizona, USA, 85281
www.sparkpointstudio.com
First Edition 2013
Second Edition 2014
Printed in the United States of America.
ISBN: 978-1-940716-13-8 (pbk)
ISBN: 978-1-940716-12-1 (ebk)
Cover design © Julie Metz, Ltd./metzdesign.com
Cover photo © plainpicture/Fancy Images
Formatting by Polagrus Studio
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Table of Contents
chapter one
chapter two
chapter three
chapter four
chapter five
chapter six
chapter seven
chapter eight
chapter nine
chapter ten
chapter eleven
chapter twelve
chapter thirteen
chapter fourteen
chapter fifteen
chapter sixteen
chapter seventeen
chapter eighteen
chapter nineteen
chapter twenty
chapter twenty-one
chapter twenty-two
epilogue
acknowledgments
about the author
For Rick, Jason, William, and Judson
chapter one
I am not planning on waking up tomorrow and feeling completely different. But I’m certainly not planning to feel the same as I do today and every other day. Tomorrow when I wake up, brilliant sunlight streaming through my windows, I’ll feel as if nothing can go wrong. It will be a momentous day. Sure, momentous is a big word, usually saved for things like fiftieth wedding anniversaries and retirements that come with gold watches, but I’ve decided that I’m going to use that word and own it. Momentous. I like the way it sounds.
Today is the last day before I start the rest of my life, because tomorrow is the first day that both of my boys will be in school all day, every day. It’s been eight years since I’ve had my days to myself all day, every day. Eight years since I’ve taken my own wants and needs and put them first. I’m not one of those coddling, helicopter moms, but even us good-enough moms can’t really put our own wants and needs first. At least not all day, every day.
So as I prepare for momentous, I’m getting all the last-day-of-summer stuff out of the way. Today is haircuts, prepping backpacks, and the last day of collecting colorful summer bugs in glass jars. We’ll take one last carefree bike ride in flip-flops and celebrate with a final late-afternoon trip to Longford’s for ice cream where we’ll probably see lots of other moms who can’t wait for tomorrow and lots of other kids who can.
But for now, the boys are out back playing baseball with some neighborhood friends, and I’m standing in front of the open fridge, trying to figure out what the hell to make for dinner. When my phone rings, I check the caller ID and answer excitedly.
“Hey, Cam!” I practically sing into the phone.
“Hey, Grace! How’s it going?”
“Going great. I really can’t wait for tomorrow. I know I’m going to feel so free, and joyful, and in control of my own life,” I say.
“Wow, that sounds promising! Good girl,” Cameron says enthusiastically.
“One more day and then I can start getting my life back in gear.”
“What exactly is out of gear?” Cameron asks.
“Well, my marriage, my stalled career, my lack of any sort of fitness, and other miscellaneous things,” I tell her. “Not necessarily, but possibly, in order of importance. I kind of have a little plan formulating in the back of my mind.”
“How much of this is because you’re freaked out about turning forty in a few months?” Cameron asks.
“I’ve told you, I’m not that freaked out about forty.”
“You know, Grace, you’re allowed to not be excited about it.”
“But I am excited. I see forty as more of an opportunity to regain control of my life. Sort of like New Year’s Eve. But with much less champagne.”
“Well, I’ll toast to that,” Cameron says. “And while we’re toasting . . . ,” she adds with an unmistakable lilt.
“What? No! What?”
“Yes!”
“Yes?”
“Seven and a half weeks officially today.”
“Oh, Cameron. Congratulations! And here I was rambling on and on about me, and you had such good news.”
“Grace, it’s fine. Really. I called as much to tell you about me as I did to find out how your day before the big day is going.”
“Well, I’m so happy for you.”
“I know. Sorry I didn’t tell you right away. But you know with my history and all, I just really wanted to make sure. And today is a day longer than I’ve ever been pregnant before. Not that I wouldn’t have told you if I had miscarried again. I just had some sort of weird superstition thing going on.”
“No need to apologize. I completely understand. But to make amends, will you meet me for dinner tonight for a proper celebration? Tengda at 7:30?” I ask.
“Don’t you have to be home with the boys tonight? Last day of summer and all?”
“I’m taking them on a long bike ride this afternoon so they’ll be tired. And they’ll think it’s more special anyway if Darren is in charge of bedtime. So Tengda?”
“Raw fish.”
“Right, raw fish. Méli-Mélo then?”
“It’s a date. And you can tell me more about your so-called plan,” Cameron says.
“I will. See you later. And Cam, I’m really so happy for you. Give my love to Jack.”
And with that, I do a little jig for my best friend who has been trying to get pregnant for five years. I boot up my laptop to email Darren the good news and the heads-up that I’ll be going out tonight.
As I wash the lunch dishes, I think about the part-time job I’m starting on Monday. I’m going to be the new “Family Li
fe” columnist for the Westchester Weekly, our county’s glossy and hip-enough attempt at New York magazine. Each week, I’ll file a 500-word article on something new and noteworthy in the county that’s perfect for families, and I can’t wait to start. It’s nowhere near my old salary, but it’s something. Plus, this job is more about the opportunity to rediscover the woman who’s been deeply buried under the labels of “wife” and “mother” for the past eight years.
I met the Weekly’s owner/publisher, Matthew O’Donnell, in June at a friend’s beach club. He and his wife, Monique, had just moved to our neighborhood in Rye (a leafy suburb of New York City where you would be confident no one would steal your car while you leave it running to dart into the post office, but you never would leave it running because people would be all over you about the toxic fumes released from idling). When I told him I had been an editor at two different fitness magazines before I had my kids (when I was still, well, fit), he asked about my writing and why I wasn’t still working.
I wasn’t sure what was the more pleasant surprise: the fact that I was actually having a meaningful conversation with a man other than my husband (something that doesn’t usually happen at these beach club gatherings where the men all gather around the bar to discuss the double S’s—sports and stocks—and the women hover nearby in their strappy summer wedges to discuss the double N’s—nannies and nips and tucks) or that I might have a connection at a publication I’d love to write for. And he was right, why wasn’t I still working? Well, I had two really adorable answers, but they were starting school in a couple months.
So, I told him, “I put my career on hold, because I wanted to be home with my kids. But they’ll both be in school full time this fall, and I’ll be ready to focus on my work again.”
“Grace has done an amazing job with the boys,” Darren said to Matthew. “They’re lucky she chose them over her career, but she’s not one of those women who is going to be happy playing tennis every day while they’re in school. She needs more than that.”
I looked at Darren and smiled, feeling so fortunate that he was so supportive. We had talked that afternoon about how I was feeling apprehensive about getting a job. How I worried I would feel overwhelmed managing both a job and my family. I knew I would be no good at all that Superwoman stuff. But I also knew that I ached to be creative again. To use my brain for more than just organizing soccer practice carpool schedules and finding innovative ways to sneak green leafy vegetables into mini meat loaves.
Matthew and I talked for a while, and I told him I thought the magazine could use a section dedicated to things families could do together, besides just the events listings in the back. When he agreed with me and said that was something his editorial department had been considering, I boldly—with a little help from my Riesling—suggested that maybe I could be the one to write it. A few phone calls, emailed clips, meetings with the editor, and trial columns later, and I was hired as the “Family Life” columnist for the Westchester Weekly.
I hear my cell phone ring so I wipe my hands on a dish towel and rush to find my phone in my disorganized purse. I find it just as the call is about to go to voicemail, notice it’s an unknown caller, and quickly touch the screen to answer.
“Hello?” I say, completely unprepared for what’s about to come.
chapter two
“Is this Grace May?”
“Yes.”
“Hi, Grace, this is Margaret White from the Westchester Weekly.”
“Oh, hi,” I say excitedly. “Did you receive the signed copy of my contract?” I had met with Margaret, the somewhat menacing but quite beautiful director of HR, once at the Weekly’s offices. I sit down at my desk in the kitchen and grab a pen to jot down any first-day info that I’ll need for next week.
“I did. That’s not why I’m calling,” she says, sounding not quite so menacing.
“Oh?”
“Grace, I’m so sorry to have to tell you this, but the magazine is closing, which, of course, means we no longer have a job for you.”
“Closing?” I ask, realizing that my voice has raised an octave in panic and that I’m repeatedly stabbing the notepad with my pen. “Why?”
“I’ve been instructed by our lawyers not to explain why. Let’s just say there’s been a change in ownership, and the new owner has decided to cease operation of the Weekly.”
And with that, she abruptly ends the conversation. And my nascent career.
What the hell?
I wake up my laptop and quickly type in the URL for the Westchester Weekly.
The site loads, but instead of the usual homepage, a tombstone of sorts announces, “We regret to inform you that despite fourteen successful years as a trusted resource for Westchester residents and businesses, we will no longer be publishing the Westchester Weekly. Our sincere thanks to our subscribers, advertisers, and friends who have supported us through the years. We will miss you.”
Seriously? This is a moment when I would usually cry. I’ve never been one to hold my emotions in check successfully. I am seriously bummed. I had been envisioning that job as a kind of salvation for me. A huge hand lifting me out from underneath all that had been burying me, holding me up in the sky, proclaiming me a productive working woman once again.
My first thought is to find out why the magazine is closing so suddenly. All signs pointed to them doing well financially: Their last issue had closed with the highest number of ad pages in the publication’s history, they had just hired me and an ad sales rep, and the publisher had just taken his senior executives on an expensive boondoggle at a fancy inn in the Hudson Valley. Why would he sell? It just doesn’t make sense. I shoot a quick email to Darren with a “Check this out!” subject line and a quick rundown of what just happened along with a link to the Weekly’s site.
More pressing, however, is the fact that I am now jobless. True, and most importantly, no one will be going hungry at my house tonight or any other night because I have no job. And does it still count as losing my job if I had never started it in the first place? The concept of my being blessed that I don’t have to work is absolutely not lost on me. I thank my lucky stars every day—well, almost every day, kind of like how I floss every day—that Darren does well enough that I don’t have to work in order for us to make ends meet. Working is a choice I make to satisfy a need within myself, not to satisfy a mortgage payment.
Sometimes I feel guilty for not working outside the home, for not struggling when so many are. Cameron always says that’s no reason for me not to enjoy my own life. That most of those women would trade places with me in a heartbeat. That, in a sense, I owe it to them to enjoy myself every day instead of feeling badly that I’m not them. And that my worrying about it doesn’t change the lot for anyone else.
I’m crushed, but maybe this job loss is a sign. Maybe I’m supposed to be a stay-at-home mom after all. Maybe the “everything happens for a reason” adage holds true in this scenario. I’m just not so sure.
Later, after our bike ride and ice cream cones, more baseball, and an early dinner and baths for the boys, they watch SpongeBob in my bedroom while I finish getting ready for dinner with Cameron.
“Hey,” Darren says as he walks in at 7:15, his voice unusually quiet.
“Hey, I’m off, I’m late. I have to be at Méli-Mélo at 7:30,” I say, giving him a quick kiss before I stuff my phone in my purse, grab my sweater, and give him the hospital-nurses-changing-shifts download. “The boys already ate, and your dinner’s in the fridge. They had ice cream this afternoon, so please don’t give them a treat even if they beg, and please make sure they brush their teeth and that James puts on a Pull-Up before he goes to sleep. He wet his bed last night, so I just want to do the Pull-Ups for a few days.”
“Okay, got it.” He smiles without meeting my eyes.
“Oh, did you get my email that I lost my job?” I ask him, as I start to walk out of the room.
“Yeah, that’s a bummer,” he says, untying his tie. “I’m
really sorry about that.” He looks at me, “Sorry I didn’t email you back. It was a crazy day.”
“That’s okay. I understand,” I say. “Alright, love you, see you later.”
“I love you, too. Tell Cam congrats,” he says and finishes taking off his tie.
During the ten-minute drive to Greenwich, I sing along to P!nk and wonder if that was a strange interaction or if I’m just imagining it. I’ve been questioning a lot about our relationship lately. I’ve tried to analyze it from every perspective. It comes down to the simple fact that we’re just not connecting.
I keep picturing a trapeze act. Darren and I are both up there swinging from our bars, acting as if the show is going according to plan. But every time I reach to grab his feet with my hands, I’m a second too late. I don’t fall into the net, I just keep swinging, with a smile on my face and my sparkly leotard just so, waiting for the next opportunity to try and grab his feet again, so we can soar together. This image is totally at odds with how I’ve always known our marriage to be. We’ve got one of those marriages people gush over. Compared with a lot of our married friends, we actually still like each other as people. We hold hands in public because we want to. We drink wine in bed and giggle over Curb Your Enthusiasm repeats. We kiss before sex.
Darren and I met at Cameron and Jack’s low-key-yet-elegant New York City wedding. I was a bridesmaid, and Darren was at the table for Jack’s childhood friends that the other bridesmaids and I scoped out because all the ushers were married. Jenny Simms and I both called dibs on the handsome, tall guy with the dark hair and ridiculously blue eyes, but I brought her a lemon drop shot, and she let me have him. Turns out, she had her eyes on Jack’s cousin anyway.
On Grace Page 1