Book Read Free

Now and Forever (1978)

Page 36

by Steel, Danielle


  She laughed through her tears as she read it ... lizards and ants. The two things she had always feared most. Other than loneliness. But she had lived with that now, so maybe she could even get used to lizards and ants ... but to life without Ian? That would be so much harder. She hadn't realized how much she had missed the sound of his voice until she read the letter. It was there. His words, his tone, his laughter, his hand rumpling her hair as he talked. The look he gave her that made her feel safe.

  Without thinking, she got to her feet and went to the desk. There was still some paper there. She reached for a pen and wrote to him, telling him that she had sold the shop, and about the house near Aunt Bethanie's ranch. She described the house down to its tiniest detail as he had taught her to do when she had thought she wanted to write. She didn't have a knack for, it but she had learned how to write careful descriptions so that her reader could see all that she did. She wanted him to see the fading Victorian in all its possible splendor, now nestled in weeds. She was going to clean it up and make it pretty. That would keep her busy for a while. She gave him the address and mentioned that she had rented the house, but to a pleasant couple without children or pets. They'd keep it in good shape, and she was sure to tell him that the studio was locked. His file cabinets were safe. And she would try to stay safe from lizards and ants. It all flowed into the letter. It was like writing to a long-lost best friend. He had always been that. She put a stamp on the envelope and walked out to the mailbox on the corner, slipped it in, and then noticed Astrid driving home. She waved, and Astrid drove into the block and stopped at the corner.

  "What are you up to tonight, Jessie? Want to have dinner?"

  "You mean you're not busy for a change, Mrs. Bonner? I'm stunned." Jessica laughed, feeling happier than she had in ages. She was actually looking forward to leaving. For the past weeks, she had almost wondered if she'd done the wrong thing. It was all so brutal, so final. But now she knew that she'd been right, and she was glad. She felt relieved, and as though she had just touched base with her soul. Ian still lived there. In her soul. Even now. Jessica tried to pry her thoughts from Ian as she smiled at Astrid.

  "No, smartass, I'm not busy. And I have a wild craving for spaghetti. How's the packing going?"

  "All done. And spaghetti sounds great."

  They dined in the noise and chaos of Vanessi's, and moved on to a sidewalk cafe, for cappuccino after that, They watched the tourists beginning to appear, the first wave of the summer, and the air was surprisingly warm.

  "Well, love, how do you feel? Scared, miserable, or glad?"

  "About leaving? All three. It's a little bit like leaving home forever ..." Like leaving Ian--again. Packing up their private treasures and odds and ends had revived so many feelings. Feelings that were better left buried now. She would not unpack those boxes again, and she had separated her things from Ian's. It would be very easy now, if they ever sold the house. Their worldly goods were no longer in one heap.

  "Well, that house of yours will keep you busy. Mother says it's a mess."

  "It is. But it won't be for long." Jessica looked proud as she said the words. She already loved the place. It was like a new friend.

  "I'll try to get down to see it before we go away in July."

  "I'd love that." Jessica smiled, feeling lighthearted and happy. A burden she couldn't quite identify had been lifted from her shoulders. She had felt its absence all evening. It was like no longer having a toothache or a cramp that she had lived with for months, not really aware of it yet subtly crippled by its presence.

  "Jessica, you look happy now. You know, I felt terribly guilty for a while, for taking the shop away from you. I was afraid you'd hate me for it." Astrid looked young and unsure as she looked into Jessie's face. But Jessica only smiled and shook her blond mane.

  "No. You don't need to worry about that." She patted her friend's hand. "You didn't take it away from me, Astrid. I sold it to you. I had to. To you, or to someone else, even if it hurt a little. And better to you. I'm glad it's yours now. I had outgrown it, I guess. I've changed a lot."

  Astrid nodded assent. "I know you have. I hope it all works out."

  "Yeah, me too." Her smile was almost rueful, and the two women finished their coffee. They were like two soldiers who have weathered the war together and now have nothing left to talk about except to make occasional guesses about the peace. Would it work? Jessie hoped so. Astrid wondered. They had both come a long way in the past months. And Astrid knew she had what she wanted now. Jessica wasn't yet quite as sure.

  "Any news of Geoffrey this week, Jessie?"

  "Yes. He called and said he'd come up to the country to see me next week." He had been sensitive enough to know she needed to be left alone in the city.

  "That'll do you good."

  Jessica nodded, but she didn't say more.

  The doorbell rang at nine-fifteen the next morning. Her bags were packed and Jessica was washing the breakfast dishes for the last time, keeping one eye on the view. She wanted to remember it all, hang on for one last hour, and then leave. Quickly. She felt almost the way she had the morning she had left for college, old times packed away in mothballs and a new life ahead. She planned to come back, at least that was what she said, but would she? She wasn't really sure. She had the odd sensation that she was leaving for longer than a summer. Maybe forever.

  The bell rang again and she dried her hands on her jeans and ran to the front door, throwing her hair back from her face, barefoot, her shirt buttoned but not quite far enough. She looked precisely the way she did when Ian loved her best. Pure Jessie.

  "Who is it?" She stood beside the front door with a small smile on her face. She knew it was probably Astrid or Katsuko. One last good-bye. But this time she would laugh, not cry as they all had at the shop.

  "It's Inspector Houghton." Everything inside her turned to stone. With trembling hands, she unbolted the door and opened it. The party mood was suddenly gone, and for the first time in months, there was terror in her eyes again. It was amazing how quickly it could all come flooding back. Months of slowly rebuilding the foundations, and in as long as it took to ring a doorbell her life was a shambles again. Or that was how she felt.

  "Yes?" Her eyes looked like greenish-gray slate and her face was set like a mask.

  "Good morning. I ... uh ... this isn't an official call exactly. I ... I found your husband's pants in the property room the other day and I thought I'd drop them off and see how you were doing."

  "I see. Thank you." He handed her a brown bag with an awkward smile. Jessie did not return the smile.

  "Going on a trip?" His eyes glanced over the bags and boxes in the hall, and she looked over her shoulder and then quickly back into his eyes. Bastard. What right did he have to be there now? Jessica nodded in answer to his question and looked down at her feet. It was a good time to end the war, to hold out a hand in peace, to go quietly. But she couldn't. He made her want to scream again, to pummel him, to scratch his face. She couldn't bear the sight of him. Terror and hatred swept over her like a tidal wave and she had the sudden urge to slither down the wall and crumple into a heap and cry. She felt as though she had been swept up in a hurricane and then cast aside by her own emotions. She looked up at him suddenly, with open pain in her eyes.

  "Why did you come here today?" There was the look of a child who does not understand in her face, and he looked away and down at his hands.

  "I thought you'd want your husband's ..." His voice trailed off and his face grew hard. Coming to see her had been a dumb thing to do, and now he was sure of it. But he had just had that feeling for days now. Of wanting to see her. "Your husband's pants were just lying around the property room. I thought ..."

  "Why? Why did you think? Is he liable to be coming home and needing them in the immediate future? Or aren't they wearing denims in prison anymore? I'm a little out of touch. I haven't been up there in a while." She instantly regretted the words. His eyes showed interest and warmed again
slightly.

  "Oh?"

  "I've been busy." She looked away.

  "Problems?" Vulture. And then she found his eyes again.

  "Do you really give a damn?" She wouldn't let go of his eyes. She wanted to scratch them out.

  "Maybe I do give a damn. Maybe ... I'm sorry. You know, I always felt sorry for you through the whole case. You seemed to believe in him so much. You were wrong, though. You know that now, don't you?" She hated the tone of his voice.

  "No. I wasn't wrong."

  "The jury said you were." He looked so smug, the bastard, so sure of "the system." So sure of everything, including Ian's guilt. She wanted to hit him. The urge was almost overpowering now.

  "The jury didn't make me wrong, Inspector Houghton. " She held tightly to the brown bag he had given her and clenched her fists.

  "Are you ... are you free now, Mrs. Clarke?"

  "Does that mean, have I left my husband?" He nodded and pulled a pack of cigarettes out of his coat pocket. "Why?"

  "Curious." Horny.

  "Is that why you came back here? Out of curiosity? To see if I'd left my husband? Would that make you happy?" She was boiling now. "And why didn't you bring this to the shop?" She held out the brown bag with Ian's pants in it.

  "I did. I was there yesterday. They told me that you don't work there anymore. True?" She nodded.

  "I don't. So now what?" She looked him in the eye again and suddenly almost a year of fear vanished. He could try to do anything he wanted and she'd kill him. With pleasure. It was a relief to confront him. She looked at him again and six months of pain passed from her eyes to his. It was a naked vision he saw there, of a human being badly scarred, and he took a long drag on his cigarette and looked away.

  "What time are you leaving on your trip? Have you got time for lunch?" Oh, Jesus. It was almost laughable, except that it still made her want to cry.

  She shook her head slowly, looking down, and then slowly she looked up again as tears filled her eyes and slid down her cheeks. It was over now. The last of the anger and the horror and the terror and the pain slid slowly down her cheeks; the trial and the jury and the verdict and the arrest and Inspector Houghton all melted into silent tears, pouring slowly down her face. He couldn't bear to look at her. It was much worse than a slap in the face. He was sorry he had come. Very sorry.

  She took a deep breath, but she did nothing about the tears. She needed them to wash all the filth away. "I'm leaving this town to get away from a nightmare, Inspector. Not to celebrate it. Why would we possibly want to have lunch together? To talk about old times? To reminisce about the trial? To talk about my husband? To ..." A sob caught in her throat and she leaned against the wall with her eyes closed, the paper bag still clutched in her hand. It was all rushing in on her again. He had brought it all back in a brown paper bag. She put a hand to her forehead, squeezed her eyes tightly shut, took a slow breath, and then opened her eyes again. He was gone. She heard the door to his car slam shut at that precise moment, and a moment later the green sedan pulled away. Inspector Houghton never looked back. She closed the front door slowly and sat down in the living room.

  The trousers she pulled out of the bag had large holes carefully cut out of them at the crotch, where the police lab had tested the fabric for sperm. As she looked at them she remembered that first time she had seen Ian in jail, in the white pajama bottoms. The pants were a great good-bye present.

  But now she knew once again why she was leaving town. And she was glad. As long as she stayed it would all have stayed with her. In some form or other. She would always have wondered if Houghton might appear again. Sometime. Somewhere. Somehow. He was gone now. Forever. As was the nightmare. And the trial. All of it. Even Ian. But she had had to leave it all. There was no carving the good from the bad anymore. It was all bad, corrupt, venomous, cancerous. And suddenly she wasn't even angry at Ian anymore. Or at Inspector Houghton. She dried her face and looked around the room and realized something. It wasn't hers anymore. None of it was. Not the pants, not the problems, not the inspector, not even the bad memories. They no longer belonged to her. They belonged in the garbage with the trousers she held in her hand. She was leaving. She had left.

  It was all behind her now. His papers in the studio. Her old check stubs filed in boxes in the basement. She was leaving all of that forever. What she was taking with her were the beautiful moments, the tender memories from long before, the portrait of Ian that she had painted when they were first married--she couldn't leave that with the new tenants--favorite books, cherished treasures. Only the good stuff. She had decided that was all she had room for anymore. To hell with Inspector Houghton. She was almost glad he had come. Now she knew she was free. Not wanting to be free, or trying to be free, or working at being free. But free.

  Chapter 35

  Leaving San Francisco was easier than she had thought it would be. She wouldn't let herself think. She just got on the highway and kept driving. No one had come to wave handkerchiefs or cry bitter tears and she was glad.

  After Inspector Houghton's visit, she had had a cup of tea, finished the dishes, put on her shoes, checked the house and the windows one last time, and left.

  The drive south was lovely, and she felt young and adventurous when she reached her decaying house on the old North Road. And she was touched when she went inside and saw what Aunt Beth had done. The house was spotlessly clean, and the sleeping bag she had left there earlier was unnecessary. There was a narrow bed in the bedroom with a bright patchwork quilt carefully folded at the foot. It was the one from her bedroom at Aunt Beth's. A young girl's Victorian desk stood in a corner, and two lamps made the room bright. The kitchen was stocked, and there were two rocking chairs and a large table in the living room, and a large easy chair by the fire. There were candles all around, and logs near the fire. She had everything she needed.

  And dinner with Aunt Beth the next day was a jovial affair. She had spent the first night alone in the new house. She had wanted it that way, and had wandered from room to room like a child, not feeling lonely, only excited. It was like the beginning of an adventure. She felt reborn.

  "Well, how do you like it? Are you ready to go home yet?" Aunt Beth chuckled with her over tea.

  "Not on your life. I'm ready to stay here forever. And thanks to you, the house is as cozy as can be."

  "It'll take more than that to make it cozy, my dear."

  But what Jessica had sent in the two crates helped a bit. Photographs, planters, a little marble owl, a collection of treasured books, two bright paintings, and the portrait of Ian. There were also blankets and brass candlesticks, and odds and ends that she loved. And she filled the house with plants and bright flowers. At the end of the week, she added to her old treasures with a few new ones she acquired at auction. Two low rough-hewn tables, and an oval hooked rug. She put them in the living room and stood back, looking pleased. It looked more like home every day. She had sent books in the trunks, and her painting things were set up in a corner, but she hadn't had time to paint anything yet. She was too busy with the house.

  The foreman's son from Aunt Beth's spent the weekend pulling weeds and mowing the lawn, and they had even discovered a crumbling gazebo far out in the back. And now she wanted a swing. Two of them. One to hang from a tall tree near the gazebo, where she could swing high and watch the sunset on the hills, and another to sit in front of the house, the kind on which young couples sat and whispered "I love you's" on warm summer nights, creaking slowly back and forth, sure that they were unique in the world.

  The letter from Ian came on Saturday morning. She had been in her new house for six days.

  And there you are, funny girl, with dust in your hair and a smudge on your nose, grinning with pride at the order you're making from chaos. I can see you now, barefoot and happy, with a cornstalk in your teeth. Or wearing your Guccis and hating it? What's it like? I can see the house perfectly now, though I can't imagine you happy in a sleeping bag on the floor. Don't tell
me you've gotten that rugged! But it sounds lovely, Jessie, and it will do you good. Though I was shocked to hear about the shop. Won't you miss it? Sounds like a hell of a good price, though. What'll you do with that pile of bucks? At this end, I'm hearing news about the making of a movie from the book. Don't hold your breath; I'm not. Those things never happen. They just get talked about. Though on the other hand, I never thought you'd sell the shop. How does that feel? Painful, I'll bet, but maybe a relief? Time to do other things. Travel, paint, clean up that palace you've saddled yourself with for the summer--or longer? I heard something in the tone of your last letter. It sounds like love for the house, and the country around it, and Aunt Beth. She must be a remarkable woman. And how are the ants and the lizards so far? Staying away? Or all wearing your best hair spray and loving it?

  She chuckled as she read; once she had tried to kill a lizard in their hotel room in Florida with her hair spray. They had asphyxiated themselves out of the room, but the lizard had loved it.

  She finished reading the letter and went to sit at the large table Aunt Beth had provided. She wanted to tell him about the things Aunt Beth had put in the house, and the goodies she'd found at auction. It didn't seem fair to let him think she was sleeping on the floor.

  The correspondence got under way as simply as that, and without the determination of their halt in communication. She didn't think about it, she just wrote to him to give him the news. It was harmless, and she was pleased for him about the movie. Maybe this time it would happen. She hoped so, for him.

  She was surprised at the length of her response. It covered six tightly written pages, and it was almost dark when she sealed the envelope and put on the stamp. She cooked dinner on the old stove, went to bed early, and got up very early the next morning. She drove into town, mailed the letter, and stopped at Aunt Beth's for a cup of coffee. But Aunt Beth was out riding.

 

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