by Joy Fielding
“How about tonight?”
“Tonight?”
“He’s really cute,” Trish said, her voice a plea.
“Tonight is fine,” Cindy said, giving in, as Trish squealed with delight and Meg jumped up and down with girlish excitement. “When and where?”
“The Pasta Bar? Seven o’clock?”
“I’ll meet you there.” Cindy flung the phone back into her purse, then confronted her friend, whose always broad smile now stretched from one side of her face to the other. “I can’t believe you did that to me.”
“Oh, relax. You’ll have a wonderful time.”
“I haven’t had a date in over a year.”
“Then it’s about time, wouldn’t you say?”
“I won’t know what to talk about.”
“Don’t worry. You’ll think of something.”
“I haven’t a clue what to wear.”
“Something stylish,” Trish said.
“Something sexy,” Meg said.
“Oh sure, something stylish and sexy. I haven’t had sex in, what …?”
“Three years,” Trish and Meg said in unison.
Cindy laughed. “You probably told him that, didn’t you?”
“Are you kidding? I tell everyone.” Trish poured Cindy a full glass of wine, raised her own glass in a toast. “To great movies, great wine, and great sex.”
Meg took another bite of her apple. “This is so French, don’t you think?”
“I CAN’T BELIEVE she did that to me,” Cindy muttered as she waited for the light at the corner of Balmoral and Avenue Road to change. “I can’t believe she gave him my number.” She shook her head, growing impatient and running across the busy thoroughfare at the first break in the traffic. “I can’t believe I said I’d go. What’s the matter with me?”
She could hear Elvis barking as soon as her toe hit the sidewalk, even though her house was at the far end of the street. That meant no one was home, and the dog had probably peed on the hall rug, a favorite new protest spot for being left alone for more than thirty minutes. She’d tried locking him in the kitchen, but he always found a way out. He’d even figured out how to unlock the large wire crate Cindy had purchased, and that now sat empty in the garage. Cindy chuckled. He was Julia’s dog all right.
A slight breeze whispered through the lush green leaves crowding the branches of the large maple trees lining the beautiful wide street in the heart of the city. Cindy and Tom had purchased the old, brown-brick home near the corner of Balmoral and Poplar Plains only months before Tom moved out, and she’d kept it as part of their divorce settlement. In return, Tom got to keep the oceanfront condo in Florida and the lakeside cottage in Muskoka, which was fine with Cindy, who’d always considered herself a city girl at heart.
It was one of the reasons she loved Toronto, and had loved it from the moment her father had relocated the family here from the suburbs of Detroit just after her thirteenth birthday. At first she’d been apprehensive about moving to a new city, a new country—It’s always snowing up there; the people only speak French; stand absolutely still if you see a bear!—but within days all such fears had been dispelled by the pleasant reality that was Toronto. More than the interesting architecture, the diverse neighborhoods, the plethora of art galleries, trendy boutiques, and theaters, what Cindy loved most about the city was the fact that people actually lived there, that they didn’t just work there during the day only to disappear into distant suburbs at night. The entire downtown core was residential. Stately old mansions with backyard swimming pools shared the same streets as towering new office buildings, and everything was only minutes away from a subway line—the subways clean, the streets safe, the people polite, if admittedly more reserved than their neighbors to the south. A city of over three million people—five million if you counted the surrounding areas—and there were rarely more than fifty murders a year. Amazing, Cindy thought now, stretching her arms into the air, hugging the city to her breast, forgiving even the summer humidity that sent spasms through her already curly hair.
After her father died, Cindy’s mother had briefly considered moving back to Detroit, where her brother and sister still lived, but her daughters, by then both married and with families of their own, had talked her out of it. In truth, Norma Appleton hadn’t needed much persuading. Within months, she’d sold the old family home on Wembley Avenue, and moved into a brand-new condominium on Prince Arthur, only a block north of the shopping mecca that was Bloor Street, and less than a five-minute drive from either of her children.
(“We should have let her move back to Detroit,” Leigh had lamented on more than one occasion. “She’s driving me nuts.”
“You take her too seriously. Don’t let her get to you.”
“Easy for you to say. You’re the one who can do no wrong.”
“I do plenty wrong.”
“You don’t have to tell me.”)
A laugh escaped Cindy’s mouth and skipped down the empty street. It always surprised Cindy that her mother and sister were so often at odds when, in fact, they were so much alike—a little of each went a long way.
Cindy checked her watch. It was almost three o’clock. She’d have just enough time to walk the dog and change out of her shorts before heading over to Marcel’s for the fittings. Then she’d have to race back home and shower and change for her stupid date with Neil Macfarlane. And she still had no idea what she was going to wear. She didn’t have any clothes that were both stylish and sexy. Whatever had possessed her to say yes? Did she need this kind of stress in her life? She crossed her fingers, said a silent prayer that Julia would be at the fitting promptly at four o’clock.
It was amazing, she thought, how much time and energy she expended fretting over her older daughter. When Julia was living with her father, Cindy had worried about her every minute of every day. Was she eating properly, getting to bed on time, doing her homework? Was she safe? Was she happy? Did the child cry herself to sleep every night, as Cindy often did, regretful of the choice she’d made? Did she wish she was home with her mother and sister where she knew in her heart she belonged? Was it misguided pride that kept her with her father year after stubborn year?
It seemed that even in her absence, Julia had taken up a disproportionate amount of space in the house on Balmoral Avenue. Missing Julia had become a steady part of Cindy’s life, a persistent ache in the pit of her stomach, an ulcer that refused to heal even after Julia decided to move back home.
A slight movement caught Cindy’s eye and she turned her head toward her next-door neighbor’s house. Faith Sellick, a new mother at age thirty-one, was rocking back and forth on the top of her front steps, her long brown hair uncombed and all but covering her face.
“Faith?” Cindy cautiously approached her neighbor’s front path, watched as the normally friendly and outgoing young woman slowly raised her head from her knees, tears streaking a face that was round and pretty and totally void of expression. “Faith, what’s going on? Are you all right?”
Faith glanced over her shoulder toward the house, then back again at Cindy. Cindy saw that the front of the young woman’s white blouse was stained with the milk leaking from her swollen breasts, creating quarter-sized circles in the thin fabric.
“What’s the matter, Faith? Where’s the baby?”
Faith stared at Cindy with sad, dull eyes.
Cindy looked past the young woman, straining to detect sounds of life from the interior of the house, but the only thing she heard was Elvis barking next door. A thousand thoughts rushed through Cindy’s mind: that Faith and her husband had had a terrible fight; that he’d walked out on her and the baby; that something horrible had happened to Kyle, the couple’s two-month-old son; that Faith had come outside to get a breath of fresh air and inadvertently locked herself out. Except none of that explained the blankness in Faith’s eyes, and why she was staring at Cindy as if she’d never seen her before in her life. “Faith, what’s the matter? Talk to me.”
/> Faith said nothing.
“Faith, where’s Kyle? Has something happened to Kyle?”
Faith stared at the house, fresh tears falling the length of her cheeks.
In the next instant, Cindy vaulted past the young woman and into her house. She took the stairs two at a time, racing toward the nursery and pushing open the door, her breath stabbing at her chest like a hunting knife. Tears stung her eyes as she threw herself toward the crib, terrified of what she might see.
The baby was lying on his back in the middle of crisp, blue-and-white gingham sheets. He was wearing a yellow sleeper and a matching yellow cap, his beautiful face as smooth and round as his mother’s, his perfect lips settled into a perfect pout, red little fists curled into tight little balls, tiny knuckles white. Was he breathing?
Cindy edged closer to the crib, and leaned her body over the side bar, pressing her cheek to the baby’s mouth and breathing in his wondrous infant scent. Gently she touched her cool lips to his warm chest, holding her breath until she felt his body shudder with the effort of a single deep breath. And then another. And another. “Thank God,” Cindy whispered, feeling the infant’s forehead with her lips to make sure he wasn’t feverish, then straightening up and backing slowly out of the room, her legs wobbling as she closed the door behind her, having to remind herself to breathe. “Thank God, you’re okay.”
Faith was still sitting on the top of the outside landing, swaying rhythmically from side to side, as if mimicking the branches of the maple tree in the middle of her front lawn, when Cindy stepped back outside, sat down beside her. “Faith?”
Faith said nothing, continued rocking from side to side.
“Faith, what’s wrong?”
“I’m sorry,” Faith said, so quietly Cindy wasn’t sure she’d heard her at all.
“Why are you sorry? Did something happen?”
Faith looked quizzical. “No.”
“Then what’s the matter? What are you doing out here?”
“Is the baby crying?”
“No. He’s sound asleep.”
Faith ran unsteady hands across her breasts. “He’s probably hungry.”
“He’s asleep,” Cindy repeated.
“I’m a terrible mother.”
“No, you’re not. You’re a wonderful mother,” Cindy assured her truthfully, recalling Faith’s excitement when she’d knocked on Cindy’s door to announce her pregnancy, how sweetly she’d asked for any advice Cindy could give her, how wonderfully gentle and patient she was with the baby. “I think we should go inside.”
Faith offered no resistance as Cindy helped her to her feet, the top of her head in line with Cindy’s chin. Cindy guided her through the large front foyer into the rectangular-shaped living room at the back of the house. A powder blue sweater lay on the hardwood floor next to the baby grand piano and Faith reached down to scoop it up, pushing her hands roughly through the sleeves, and quickly securing its three white buttons. Then she sank down into the green velvet sofa, and leaned her head against the pillows.
“What’s Ryan’s number at work?”
“Ryan’s at work,” Faith said.
“Yes, I know. I need his phone number.”
Faith stared blankly at the pale green wall ahead.
“It’s okay. I’ll find it. You stay here. Lie down.”
Faith smiled and obediently lifted her feet off the floor, bringing her knees to her chest.
Cindy quickly located Ryan’s work number from the bulletin board by the kitchen phone and punched in the correct numbers. It was answered on the first ring.
“Ryan Sellick,” the man said instead of hello.
“Ryan,” Cindy enunciated clearly, “this is Cindy Carver. I think you need to come home.”
THREE
“YOU’RE late.”
“I’m sorry. I got here as fast as I could.”
“I said four o’clock,” Leigh reminded her sister, square red nails tapping on the gold band of her watch for emphasis, then pushing newly streaked hair away from a face that was pinched with incipient hysteria. The impatience in her hazel eyes was underlined in heavy black pencil, and mascara sat like tiny lumps of coal on her lashes. Anxiety draped across her shoulders like a well-worn shawl. “It’s almost four-thirty,” she said. “Marcel has to leave at five.”
“I’m really sorry.” Cindy looked from her sister to the short, curly-haired man in tight brown leather pants who was conferring with his assistant in a far corner of the long, cluttered room. “There was a problem with my next-door neighbor. She’s acting very strangely. I’m afraid things just kind of got away from me.”
“They always do,” Leigh said.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Look, you’re here now. Let’s not make a big deal out of it.”
Cindy took a deep breath, silently counting to ten. If you hadn’t picked a dressmaker whose shop is halfway out of the city, I might have been able to get here on time, she wanted to say. If you hadn’t scheduled the damn fittings for the height of rush hour traffic, I might not have been so late. Besides, you’re the one making the big deal out of it, not me. Instead she said, “So, how’s it going so far?”
“As expected.” Leigh lowered her voice to a whisper. “Mother is driving me nuts.”
“What are you whispering about?” a woman’s gravelly voice called from one of the dressing rooms at the back of the shop.
Cindy spun around, absorbing the details of the small dressmaking salon in a single glance: the wide front window, the bare white walls lined with racks of silk and satin gowns in varying stages of completion, bolts of bright fabric carpeting the floor and occupying the only two chairs in the room, a full-length mirror in one corner, three appropriately angled mirrors in another, another room at the back crowded with assorted tables, sewing machines, and ironing boards. Cindy sidled up to a rack of more casual suits and dresses that was pushed off to one side, wondering whether she might find something on it that was sufficiently stylish and sexy for her date with Neil Macfarlane.
“Cindy’s here,” Leigh called to her mother.
“Hi, dear,” her mother’s disembodied voice sang out.
“Hi, Mom. How’s the dress?”
“You tell me.” Cindy watched her normally vivacious, seventy-two-year-old mother push open the heavy white curtain that served as her dressing room door and frown uncertainly, her fingers pulling at the sides of the magenta satin gown.
“Tell her she looks beautiful,” Leigh whispered behind cupped fingers, pretending to be scratching her nose.
“What did your sister say?”
“She said you look beautiful,” Cindy told her.
“What do you think?”
“Naturally,” Leigh said under her breath. “What I think doesn’t count.”
“What’s your sister muttering about now?”
“I’m right here, Mother. You don’t have to ask Cindy.”
“I think you look beautiful,” Cindy said, genuinely agreeing with her sister’s assessment and reaching out to pat her mother’s fashionable blond bob.
Norma Appleton made a dismissive gesture with her mouth. “Well, of course, you girls would stick together.”
“What’s the problem you’re having with the dress, Mom?” Cindy asked, spotting a short red cocktail dress on the rack of more casual offerings, wondering if it was her size.
“I don’t like the neckline.” Her mother tugged at the offending area. “It’s too plain.”
The neckline might be too low-cut, Cindy thought, noting the daring bodice of the short red dress. She didn’t want to give Neil Macfarlane the wrong idea. Did she?
He’s really cute, Trish whispered in her ear.
“I’ve already explained to Mother a million times.…”
“I’m right here, you know,” Norma Appleton said. “You can talk to me.”
“I’ve already told you a zillion times that Marcel will be adding beading along the top.”
&
nbsp; Cindy mentally discarded the short red dress, her eyes moving down the rack to a long, shapeless, beige linen sack. Definitely not, she decided, picturing herself lost inside its voluminous folds. She didn’t want Neil Macfarlane to think he was dating a nun. Did she?
You haven’t had sex in three years.
“I hate beading,” her mother was saying.
“Since when do you hate beading?”
“I’ve always hated beading.”
“What about a jacket?” Cindy suggested, trying to still the voices in her head. “Maybe Marcel could make up something in lace.…” She glanced imploringly at Marcel, who promptly left his assistant’s side to join them in the center of the room.
“A lace jacket is a lovely idea,” her mother agreed.
“I thought you didn’t like lace,” Leigh said.
“I’ve always liked lace.”
The last time she’d had sex, Cindy recalled, she’d been wearing a lace peignoir. The man’s name was Alan and they’d met when he came into Meg’s shop to buy a pair of crystal-and-turquoise earrings for his sister’s birthday. Cindy found out that he didn’t have a sister when his wife came by the following week to exchange the earrings for something subtler. By then, of course, it was too late. The peignoir had been purchased; the deed had been done.
“What do you think, Marcel?” Cindy asked now, her voice unnaturally loud. The poor man took a step back, glancing anxiously at Cindy’s mother, trying not to fixate on the deep creases her fingers were inflicting on the delicate satin of his design.
Without hesitation, Marcel reached for the tape measure that circled his neck like a scarf. “Whatever you desire.”
Whatever you desire, Cindy repeated silently, savoring the sound. How long had it been since anyone had offered her whatever she desired? Would Neil Macfarlane?
He’s to die for. I swear. You’ll love him.
“Did I hear you say something about problems with a neighbor?” her mother asked, lifting her arms to allow Marcel to measure their length.
“Yes,” Cindy said, grateful for the chance to get her mind on something else. “You remember the Sellicks from next door? They had a baby a few months ago?” she asked, as if she weren’t sure. “I think she might have post-partum depression.”