These Days Series: After Tuesday | Forgotten Yesterday | Deciding Tomorrow

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These Days Series: After Tuesday | Forgotten Yesterday | Deciding Tomorrow Page 57

by Renee Ericson


  “Hello, Mother,” Brent says, hugging her quickly. “It’s good to see you.”

  “You, too.” She steps back, holding his hands. “You’re as handsome as ever.”

  “I try.” Releasing a hand, he reaches back and pulls me to his side. “You remember Ruby?”

  “Of course I do.” She gives me a genuine smile. “It’s good to see you again.”

  “You too, Mrs.—”

  “Please, call me Angela.”

  “Angela.”

  Brent lets go of her hand. “Let’s sit down.”

  “Oh, yes,” she agrees.

  His mother takes one side of the booth situated along a partition, and Brent and I sit on the other side. We place our drink orders and then partake in small conversation about the weather and the city. Angela is kind, warm, and good-natured in every way. I’m confused as to why Brent had any apprehension about seeing her today. She has an easy way with dialogue, much like Brent. I’m immediately comfortable in her presence despite not having seen her in years. By the time our drinks arrive, any initial distress from Brent has dissipated.

  “So, how long are you here?” I casually ask Angela.

  “Just until tomorrow night,” she replies. “I flew in this morning and hope to close the deal tomorrow before lunchtime. It’s for a European client who has an office in Chicago. Their office likes to have all the terms settled before end of business day, their time.”

  “I hope it goes well.”

  An international client along with national travel is impressive. Her career sparks a bit of admiration.

  “Thank you. Me, too.”

  We order our meals, and Brent and his mother continue to get reacquainted after not seeing one another in almost six months. For the most part, I remain silent as they converse. I’m here to support Brent and just be here, like he would for me.

  Halfway through our entrees, Angela takes a sip of her wine and angles her posture in my direction. “So, Ruby,” she begins, “Brent mentioned on the phone that you’re back in school. How’s that going?”

  I finish chewing the morsel in my mouth. “It’s going well. I’m slated to graduate in the spring.”

  “What do you plan to do afterward?” She lifts her glass to her mouth, watching me.

  This is a topic I haven’t fully fleshed out, and it still requires some discussion with Brent.

  “I’m undecided as of right now,” I tell her.

  “Undecided about what?”

  “Whether or not I want to go into grad school right away or not.”

  “Have you submitted applications yet?”

  Is this an interrogation?

  Brent presses his fingers to the small of my back.

  “Yes, a few,” I reply. “I’m still waiting to hear back though. They can take some time, and some of the schools have an interview process.”

  “I didn’t know that,” Brent chimes in. “Interviews?”

  “Yeah.” I clear my throat and finger the napkin in my lap. “They usually happen a little later though.”

  “Well,” Angela says, “I think it’s wonderful. Education opens a multitude of opportunities.” Picking up her knife and fork, she cuts off a bite of food. “Brent, you should consider going back to school as well to get your degree. It’s not too late.”

  Brent stiffens beside me, closes his eyes, and breathes slowly through his nose. “I think I’m doing okay in my career right now.”

  “Yes, right now.” Angela takes a small bite and then continues, “But what if you were to get injured? Then, what?”

  “Then, I guess I would have enough free time to go back to school, but right now, I’m kind of busy.”

  Under the table, I cover his hand with mine, giving it a small squeeze. I finally understand some of the tension he’s been feeling about this dinner.

  His mother doesn’t approve of his decisions.

  I understand his mother’s desire for Brent to achieve, but she doesn’t seem to be overly supportive of something he’s doing so well in either. Made for the game, he’s practically a star in the league, and for some reason, she doesn’t see that.

  “It’s good to keep your options open,” Angela adds and then takes another bite. “You should look into getting back into the university where Ruby is.”

  “I think Ruby’s circumstances were a little different than mine, Mom. She just took a break. I had trouble with my grades.”

  “Yes, I remember.” She tightens her mouth and starts sawing hard at the steak on her plate. “Maybe another university then?”

  “Perhaps,” he concedes. “But not right now.”

  We continue to eat again in silence, a mild tension lingering. When our meals are complete and the plates are cleared, farewells are soon to follow since no one asks for the dessert menu.

  “When do you go back to L.A., Brent?” Angela questions.

  “Preseason team training begins in a few days.”

  “That’ll be good. I’m sure you can’t wait to get back to the sunshine and warmth. I forgot how cold this city is. I guess I haven’t been back in some time—at least not in the winter.”

  “It hasn’t been so bad,” he comments, his hand on my knee. “I barely noticed the weather. Been kind of busy.”

  “Oh, well, that’s good, dear,” she replies, oblivious to his double entendre. Angela flips her wrist, regarding the time on her watch. “I should get going. I have an early meeting.” She raises her hand, beckoning over our server for the check.

  I excuse myself to use the restroom, so I can freshen up before we leave. I also want to give them a moment to talk. Brent wanted me here with him for support, but he still should have a few moments alone with his mother as well. He hasn’t seen her in months.

  I check my hair in the mirror and adjust my dress. After counting to one hundred, I wash my hands. Enough time has passed, so I exit the restroom and weave through the restaurant back to where we are seated.

  At the partition, about to turn the corner, my feet slow. I overhear my name.

  Brent grumbles something indecipherable.

  “Her father is in prison,” Angela states in a somewhat hushed tone. “Did you know that?”

  “Yes, Mother,” Brent says, exasperated. “I’m fully aware that her dad is in prison and why. I went with her to see him on Christmas.”

  “So, that’s why you didn’t spend the holiday with your father?”

  “Why should you care? It doesn’t make any difference to you. You barely even noticed that I didn’t spend Thanksgiving with you. Don’t pretend to all of a sudden care where I spend the holidays.”

  “Brent,” she consoles, “I love you. You’re my son. Of course I care. I just want the best for you.”

  “Well, it’s easy to see that you don’t think Ruby is it.”

  “She’s a nice girl.” Angela pauses. “Pretty, too. I can see why you like her, and I know you two have a history, but she seems to come with a lot of baggage.”

  Silence stretches with neither one of them adding to the conversation. These accusations about me, while hurtful, are true. The way people see me is never surprising, but it’s still upsetting, especially coming from the mother of the man I love, but family is a delicate balance, no different than mine.

  Uncomfortable eavesdropping, I step forward to rejoin them.

  “I don’t mean it like that, Brent,” Angela says.

  I stop, still out of view.

  She continues, “Really, I don’t, but with everything she comes from I just wonder—”

  “What do you wonder, Mother?”

  “It just feels a little too convenient—you two after all these years, almost out of the blue. You don’t even live in the same city, yet here you are.”

  “What is that supposed to mean?”

  “The girl is a student and a waitress and barely makes any money—”

  “So?” he objects. “What does that have to do with anything?”

  “Well…” Her voice lo
wers. “She isn’t pregnant, is she?”

  My heart stills, and a lump completely clogs my throat. I wait for him to reply.

  Brent says nothing.

  Why would she even ask that?

  “She is, isn’t she?” she pushes.

  “Mom,” Brent scolds, “stop.”

  “I knew it. This is just like Christina.”

  Who the fuck is Christina?

  Angela lets out a frustrated sigh. “Just another girl who’s nothing but trouble with a baby. When are you going to learn?”

  “You have got it completely wrong. This is nothing like that. You don’t know Ruby like I do.”

  “Oh, she’s a nice girl, Brent, and so is Christina. But don’t you see what’s going on? They’re just using you. You put yourself in these bad situations with these women, and they will take advantage of you. Are you ready to play father again?”

  I. Can’t. Breathe.

  “Stop, right now,” Brent snarls. “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “You need to see when people are just after one thing. The girl has a criminal for a father and hardly makes a dime. She doesn’t have the best track record for staying in school. Who even knows if she’ll graduate at all? Nothing good can come of this.”

  “That’s it.”

  The sound of silverware against porcelain clinks into the air.

  “I’m just looking out for you,” she says in a panic. “I just don’t want you to go through that again.”

  Go through what again? What the hell?

  “I’m leaving,” he says, suppressing his rage. “It was a pleasure, Mother.”

  Brent rises from his seat. Holding my ground, my gaze meets his over the partition. His eyes widen, realizing my presence.

  He drops his chin, focusing on his mother. “I love her,” he says evenly. “I hope one day you can see that’s all it is…and nothing else.”

  Angela’s dark head of hair pops into view as she stands face-to-face with her son. “I hate fighting with you like this.”

  Brent sneaks a peek in my direction, and I round the corner to join them, but I keep my distance.

  “We’re leaving,” Brent announces, scarcely covering his anger. “I will call you later, Mother.”

  “Very well.” She runs her hand down the length of his arm. “I love you, and I hope to see you again soon.”

  “Yeah, me, too,” he says. It’s clear that he doesn’t mean it.

  “Thank you for dinner,” I say, confused. I’m on the verge of tears. I have no idea what is going on, but I will be polite and cordial in a public place. I will play my part. “It was good to see you.”

  “You, too.” She glances at my midline. “Take care.”

  “I will.”

  I turn and head directly to the host stand with Brent fast on my heels.

  “Ruby,” he calls after me, “hold on.”

  I pull my coat-claim ticket from my purse and hand it over to the hostess’s waiting hand. I grab a tissue from the stand and dab the threatening tears at my bottom lids.

  “Ruby,” Brent says gently, placing his hand on my shoulder.

  I shrug him off. “Please don’t touch me right now.”

  “Okay,” he replies, defeated.

  We gather our coats and quickly exit the restaurant. Brent hails a cab and opens the door. I get in, scooting all the way to the other side and away from him. I feel like I’m sitting next to a stranger. A person I don’t even know exists within the skin of the man next to me. The hurtful things his mother said sting, but I will get over those. It’s not the first time I’ve heard them.

  However, Brent…and what his mother implied about him…

  I have no idea what’s going on.

  The car proceeds north toward my address under the sea of city lights.

  “How much did you hear?” Brent asks, cautious.

  “Why do you want to know? So, you can figure out your lies?”

  “No.”

  His hand covers mine, and I yank it away.

  “So, I know what questions to answer.”

  A warm tear trails down my cheek. “Who’s Christina?”

  Thirty

  The buildings and streetlights pass in a blur as the silence in the cab interior thickens. I angle my body away from Brent, facing the door, and rest my head on the cool glass surface at a total loss.

  Secrets—I’m finding the man next to me has many. For two months, we have shared our lives and our love, and he’s been keeping things, important things, from me.

  “You’d better start talking,” I remind him.

  “Can you take us to the pier instead?” Brent asks, leaning forward and addressing the driver.

  “No problem,” the driver says, pulling into another lane.

  “I’m not in the mood, Brent,” I mumble. “The lake isn’t going to fix this.”

  “No, it isn’t.” His voice is dangerously quiet. “I am. I’m going to fix this.”

  My form crumbles, and my lids shut. I’m so torn. My confusion is anchored by the betrayal of my heart. The car travels through the tourist section of the city, down Michigan Avenue, and veers east toward the lake. It stops in front of the Navy Pier entrance, lit up against the black night. The water is indistinguishable, swallowed by the darkness.

  Brent pays the driver and opens his door. I stay in place with no desire to move.

  “I just want to go home,” I say, my body heavy. “I know what you’re doing.”

  “How can you possibly want to go home with me right now? You won’t even look at me.”

  I lift my eyes to his.

  “Or even let me touch you.” He steps outside, and the wind tussles his dark hair. “C’mon, I owe you some answers.”

  Gathering my aching heart, I slide along the bench seat and emerge into the night. Brent closes the door, the cab takes off, and we meander side by side down the walkway toward the end of the long platform. Hands tucked into our pockets, we are wordless.

  Passing the gardens, Brent steps in front of me, freezing our progression. “You know I love you, right?” he asks tentatively, hands at his sides. “You don’t doubt that, do you?”

  “My heart hurts, Brent. Between your mom and your secrets, I don’t know what to think.”

  “Ignore my mother. I don’t care about what she said or her opinions.”

  He steps toward me, and I stiffen, not welcoming him in my space.

  “Her issues are with me, not you,” he says.

  I close my fists, tension abounding. “Who is Christina?”

  “That’s a longer story.” He inclines his head toward the rotating Ferris wheel. “Take a ride with me?”

  “You have got to be joking.”

  “I’m kind of not. I want to talk to you, and I don’t want you to walk away from me. You won’t be able to in there.”

  “Brent, I’m not in the mood for games. You need to start talking because my mind is going crazy, and you need to fucking set it straight.” The anger enters my cheeks, hardening my face. “You need to tell me that you don’t have a family somewhere and that you’re not hiding some secret double life. All I have right now is some girl named Christina”—my rage-filled eyes moisten—“and you with a kid.”

  He doesn’t reply.

  “Aren’t you going to say anything?” I shout.

  “The baby wasn’t mine,” he enunciates.

  “What baby?”

  “Christina’s.” He rubs his hand across his face. “She wasn’t mine.”

  “Then, what in the hell was your mother talking about?”

  He faces out over the midnight water leading into the city twinkling at the shoreline. Time stretches on. The wind howls across the bare bushes.

  “When I went to Sweden,” he says with glassy vision, “I fucked up. I was so lost without you. You didn’t want me. Do you know how that feels? To not be wanted? To be pushed away and shut out?”

  My stomach falls hard and fast. “Of course I do.�
��

  “Well, that’s what you did to me.” Inhaling sharply, he lifts his face to the dark heavens. “You all did.”

  I wait, unsure what to say. He’s right. I pushed him away. His family tore apart, and so did his life, our life.

  I wait…and wait for more.

  There’s more.

  “Between you, school, my parents, the baby…our baby…I…soccer wasn’t the answer, Ruby. Sweden wasn’t the answer.” Defeat overcomes him. “I can’t believe I’m saying this, but your arms didn’t want me anymore. No one’s did, so I went into anyone’s that would have me.”

  “Christina?”

  “Yes, and others.” Brent shakes his head. “It was different over there, being an American and an athlete. It was easy.”

  “What are you saying?”

  Seconds pass.

  And then, it clicks.

  “Are you telling me you were screwing all of Scandinavia while you were there?” I ask in denial. “Is that what you’re telling me right now?”

  He grunts. “I don’t know. Fuck!” He lifts his hand to his brow. “Not all of Scandinavia.”

  “But not just this Christina girl, right?”

  “No.”

  My body squirms at the thought of him with another woman—not just one but many.

  How many? I don’t know. I don’t even want to know.

  “I can’t hear this, Brent. I don’t want to hear about you screwing other people.”

  “Why not? I had to hear about you fucking Russ!”

  My chest pushes in and out, moving the air quickly. A crazed fury is building.

  I turn on my heel and walk away. Brent grabs my arm and twists me around only a few steps down the pier.

  “Don’t touch me!” I jerk out of his grasp. In a lower tone, I stress, “Do not touch me.”

  Brent raises his hands in surrender, taking a few steps back. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said that.”

 

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