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Layers Page 28

by Sigal Ehrlich


  My heart misses a beat when I open the door to find Daniel standing there, black tee and jeans, gorgeous, hesitantly smiling at me. He is here and he is smiling at me now.

  My mental equilibrium is brutally tantalized looking back at him. Momentarily every part of me becomes frozen, not sure what to say or think. On one hand I am thrilled to see him here smiling at me, but as logic reasserts itself I am reminded how much pain he put me through and how easily he gave me up. The anger that possessed me in the last few days quickly overcomes my urge to throw myself at him.

  “Hi, Hales.”

  Don’t Hales me. “Daniel,” I say, my voice betraying me by failing to sound stable.

  “Can I come in?”

  “Why?” I retaliate. Disregarding my question he takes a couple of steps forward to the entrance of our hall, and instinctively I take the equivalent steps backward. I won’t be able to control myself if he gets any closer.

  “Can we talk?” His eyes rest on mine with an edge of anxiety.

  Now? Just like that? Where were you a few days ago?

  “Daniel,” I say. “What took you so long?” is what comes to my mind and out my mouth with a jaded bite, and before I let him answer I continue, more firmly this time. “Let me do the talking.” He nods, his eyes captivating mine, he looks weary but in his own handsome way.

  Once I finally open my mouth, everything that was building inside of me just spills out.

  “You gave me plenty of time since this unfortunate fiasco came to life, and you know what, time does makes you think hard, because that’s all that’s left to do when you’re in tremendous pain. Fortunately, it put things in perspective and when the pain stopped overshadowing my right mind and the insane longing for you eased, I understood that it was you who broke us.” Briefly, I watch him cringe and continue, “It was you who made a choice. The choice not to trust me, to not even try to understand. You chose to give me up, give us up and give in to your stubbornness and whatever it is that you so dearly protect from the world. I can assure you that what I told you by the fire was the truth. I have never felt this way about anyone before. Hell, I’ve never felt even remotely close to what I feel for you for anyone else. Ever. But you chose not to believe me by turning your back on me, by turning your back on us.”

  I stop to take a needed deep breath, highly conscious of my beating heart and unsteadiness. He doesn’t tear his eyes from mine and lets me continue, his jaw clenched. His great effort to stay self-possessed doesn’t escape me.

  “Like I tried to tell you before, yes, I did say everything that was written in that article, but not the way it was written, not to the person who wrote it, and the main point is that it was said out of love, out of confessing my overwhelming feelings I felt for you to my best friend. And yes, it is unfortunate that a tabloid reporter overheard it all, and I am so sorry for that. I really am. But if you had only tried to listen, you would have understood that my innocent words were quoted out of context in the most cruel way. No, stop,” I say, as he tries to speak. “Let me finish, please!” He does.

  “And now you come here, tonight, after letting me go through the seven circles of hell. When you were the first one to walk away from us and then treated me as you did, I felt numb. You broke me. I can’t listen to you now. I don’t want you here, Daniel.”

  “Look at me, please,” he says, quiet and firm.

  It’s too hard, don’t you get it?

  “Hales, I need you to look at me,” he repeats. “Hales, open your eyes and look at me, goddamn it.”

  I tilt my head to look at him and there is so much pain in his eyes. For once, he’s listened to me.

  “I’m sorry I gave up on us when you never did, but don’t give up too, Hales. Don’t be like me. You’re far better than this.” The emotion filling his voice is genuine. “Hales, I can’t go on feeling this way. I need you. I need us. I love you.”

  My heart wrenches brutally from these three little words, and I know that if I look at him for a minute more I will break. I won’t have the power to hold myself back. And I don’t want that, I can’t let him hurt me again. I won’t survive a second round.

  “I can’t do this Daniel. I can’t.”

  “Hales, don’t.”

  “I can’t, sorry,” I murmur, bitterly torn. Grasping the gravity of my words, he takes a few reluctant steps back, his pleading stare not leaving mine.

  “Please, just leave.” And I close the door on him, but not before getting a glimpse of his utterly devastated eyes.

  Once behind the closed door a silent cry burns me inside, evoking the pain again, this unbearable pain that consumes every part of me. I slide to the floor, rest my head in my hands and let it all go in the anguished realization that he was here just a moment ago with the intent to make amends.

  ~~~

  A turn of the doorknob snaps me out of the hypnotic state I’ve been in since I closed the door behind Daniel.

  “Hales?” Tasha calls as she tries to open the door. I scoot over a little to allow her enough space to get in.

  “By the way you look I guess you know that Daniel’s outside,” she comments in an airy voice.

  “He’s still here?” I ask hesitantly, my eyes swollen and my hands shaky.

  She nods approvingly. “He was leaning with his forehead glued to the door. It looks like he’s in real pain, Hales.”

  The notion tears me up inside. I’m still a rollercoaster of anger and longing, torn by my need for him and the rational need to stay away. What have I done?

  Assessing me, she adds, “He asked me to tell you something.” Her green eyes are tender.

  “What was it?” I ask, almost inaudibly, sniffing and wiping my eyes with the back of my hands.

  “He asked me to say that he hopes you won’t let this be the last thing you ever tell him.” Hearing that, excruciating pain expands in my stomach. Tasha’s enquiring, soft gaze rests on me.

  “I can’t endure this pain anymore, Tash,” I exhale with a sob.

  “It doesn’t look as though you can,” she says, as she sits next to me on the floor. “It seems that neither of you can, Hales,” she adds, her voice small and cautious. “You need to let me in so I can know how I can help.”

  She listens carefully as I tell her in detail about Daniel’s visit.

  “I’m not going to tell you what to do because I can’t. It’s not my place. It’s not anybody’s, Hales, but yours.” She tucks her hair behind her ears. “What was the main reason you let him go?” she asks, seeking my eyes.

  I ponder her question. “Anger and fear,” I answer and elaborate for the benefit of explaining myself, to both of us … “Anger at the way he treated me in that cold and detached way, anger about the fact that he didn’t trust me enough to even confront me, anger because he assumed the worst, though I should be the one person he should trust the most.” My voice cracks as I say it. I take a moment to compose myself, then continue. “Fear at the strong emotions I have for him, and how easily he could hurt me like he did.”

  “With what you’ve just said in mind, you need to think hard about what’s more painful. Being hurt by him, since you know he’s not exactly predictable, and no one can guarantee he won’t hurt you again, or plainly being without him.” She rubs her hands against her stretched legs.

  “Numb?” I question, noticing her.

  “Numb and hurting.”

  “Suffering for me. How noble of you, Missy.” I contort my lips trying to smile at her through my immense suffering. She reciprocates with a hug.

  “I need to pack for tomorrow,” I say after a while.

  “Do you need any help?”

  “No thanks, not much to pack anyway; it’s for a short visit.”

  “You know, Hales, I think we should have done all this talking at the airport.” She regards me with a faint smile as she gives me her hand to help me stand up.

  ~~~

  Flossing, I think about Tasha’s last comment regarding the airport. There�
�s something about airports that always calms me down. Over the years we’ve been friends I’ve managed to pass it on to Tasha, to have her embrace my refuge as her own. We’ve sat together for countless hours at terminal arrival halls spilling our guts, talking for hours and mostly watching people reunite.

  ~~~

  Later at night, under the shield of my comforter, I turn to think about the evening’s events and Tasha’s words. There is a raging debate between my heart, which wants Daniel at any cost and my mind, which knows exactly the level of agony he can put me through. The debate ends in a deadlock.

  Chapter 39: Home Sweet Home

  On the plane to my childhood home I think about the fact that I should pull myself together and act poised for my parents’ sake. I don’t want to them all about being wrecked by heartache. What they don’t know won’t upset them.

  They have enough worries with Steven being away. I don’t need to add my sorrow, because I carelessly fell in love with someone my own intuitions warned me to stay away from. They don’t need to know that I’m embracing sorrow as it consumes me.

  That is it, Hayley. That’s the last of it. No more obsessing about him. You made up your mind, and now you should go ahead and live with it. You’re going to be home soon.

  At the sight of my two loving parents waiting for me, my heart thuds with sheer excitement. I take the final steps toward the arrivals hall.

  “Hayley, baby.” My mom’s teary eyes run over me head to toe in adoration right before she pulls me into a warm embrace. Her chubby arms enfold me, surrounding me with her comforting and familiar scent of vanilla and home. As she lets go of me, my father seizes the chance to lift me up for a firm hug.

  “You’ve lost weight, baby girl.”

  That’s what happens when you live on about ten spoons of Dr. Ian’s miracle medicine and caffeine for almost a week.

  “Let me look at you.” He carefully puts me back on the ground. “Everything ok, baby girl?” he asks, looking fairly concerned.

  “Of course it is,” I radiate a fake reassuring smile, trying to add a cheerful note to my tone.

  “Let her be, Derek.” My mom protects me; I look at her fondly, appreciative.

  “Have you heard anything from Steven lately?” I ask, watching them both from the back seat. My mom in a flowery sundress, her soft, golden curls in a half-do, a smile never leaving her face. My dad focuses on the road ahead, serious in a green polo shirt and short cargo khakis, firm hands on the wheel.

  My mom turns back to look at me. “There was a short note a couple of weeks ago. Just same ol’ Steven. The minimal amount of words needed to say ‘I’m still alive, please don’t worry’.”

  A thin curve takes place on my lips. Yes, that’s a lot like Steven. Expressing his feelings and writing were never his strong suits. Thinking about it I realize I haven’t seen him for far too long and can’t wait to again. It’s nearly a year since he embarked on the military aircraft that took him to a foreign, hostile, country, far away from us.

  “Lely, anything special you would like to do while at home?”

  “I guess surf and maybe meet up with some people?”

  She nods with warm, gleaming eyes. “Thought you would. I brought your wetsuit back from the basement. It’s hanging in your closet.”

  That’s my mom, always considerate of my needs. My heart swells at the thought.

  “Thanks, Mom.” I beam as I stare out the window at the familiar view of the suburban landscape.

  “Are you hungry, dear?”

  “Not starving,” I answer. And that’s an understatement for you. I’m not so into food lately, Mom. You know how it is when your heart is broken into a gazillion pieces.

  “Made spaghetti and meatballs.”

  How suitable. I quickly look away to keep her from seeing the storm whirling within me as I think about the last time I ate the same dish. Don’t go there. Stop thinking. Stop thinking before the tears show up. Not here, not now.

  I quickly start chattering about nothing and everything just to make sure I don’t focus on the one thing I shouldn’t. I volunteer information about my work, about Tasha, even about Ian. My mom can’t hide both her surprise and excitement over my incessant gushing.

  I’m glad when we finally arrive. I’ve run out of insignificant topics to discuss.

  ~~~

  Convincing my mother that I would eat after a short visit to the lakes is an exhausting battle, though with some miracle she eventually caves in.

  Ever since we were toddlers she has been obsessed with our nutrition. Given both Steven and I are relatively skinny she takes it as her own life failure to have malnourished her children and future descendants and every chance she gets she tries to make amends.

  “Hales, can you come over before heading out?” my father calls from his office and home clinic, giving me a chance to escape my mom before she shoves something edible down my throat.

  “What is it, Dad?”

  He sits behind his desk looking all authoritative, his broad body filling out the width of his brown leather chair. Under his half-moon glasses, he studies me for some beats before replying.

  “What’s really going on, baby girl?” His eyes are tender brown with concern.

  “What do you mean?” I try to look as casual as my conscience allows. How can he see right through me?

  “My dear,” he sighs. “You can radiate as many smiles as you want to try to cover up whatever’s been eating at you, but you have to know your eyes aren’t cooperating. Hales, it’s been a while since I saw so much pain in these beautiful eyes of yours. Boy troubles?”

  Leave it to the family doctor who’s been taking care of people for more than two decades to see right through my heart.

  “What if I told you that it’s nothing that time can’t heal, Dad? I would much rather not dig into it.”

  No matter how much time passes, I don’t think I’ll be able to remove him from my heart. I’m not even sure I’ll ever be able to look at anyone else in the same way again. How can anyone even measure up to him?

  My dad inhales heavily. “Then I would say that I’ll respect your privacy and your wishes, and I would add that whenever you feel like talking I’ll be waiting here with open arms.” He looks deep in my eyes. “And as a certified physician I would say that talk and comfort ease a wounded heart.”

  I stare down at my red sneakers so I can stifle back the tears before looking back at him. Even though he means well I feel more vulnerable than I did before.

  “Lely, I think your phone is dying.” My mom’s voice reaches us from the kitchen, giving me a good excuse to flee my dad’s concerned gaze.

  “I am pretty sure I haven’t brought my charger with me,” I murmur, annoyed.

  “Perhaps ours could do the job?” she tries.

  I shake my head, well aware of the fact that my parents haven’t upgraded their mobile devices since the Clinton administration.

  Looking at the two screaming red lines, I figure it could last at least until tomorrow—I don’t plan to use it anyway.

  ~~~

  Wearing my wetsuit, sunglasses and popping an Advil, I walk back to the kitchen to fetch the car keys. My mom’s at the counter cutting vegetables on a wooden chopping board with oldies playing in the background. Her kitchen is as spotless as the rest of the house. Daisies enrich the air with their fresh scent from their place in a clear vase on the dining table. My mom hums to the music, occasionally adding an almost unseen sway. Sanity is the word that comes to my mind as I observe this scene, this place.

  Between the hideous pain that doesn’t leave my chest, work, Tasha, Ian’s constant hyperactivity, and no Daniel, this is the best place I could be right now. My sane place. Turning back as though sensing me my mom says, “Dad already secured your board to the car, Lely.”

  My safe, comforting place. I smile to myself. Though being snug in Daniel’s arms beats even this.

  “Are you sure this is the best weather to surf?” my mom as
ks, looking skeptically out the window.

  “Don’t worry, I’ll be careful. If it gets stormier I’ll come back.”

  She nods, utterly unconvinced, but lets me be.

  Chapter 40: When It Rains It Pours

  Nothing could be more symbolic of my current state than the great lakes spread in front of me with their raging gray waters. I need to battle the water, paddling frantically, to get to a point where I can catch waves; I am rocked by the manic water as I tread water waiting for the ultimate wave. Maybe it wasn’t such a good idea to surf in this weather after all. Do I have a death wish? Well, in my current state … When I catch the wave it throws me forward; I almost lose my balance but regain it quickly and tune with the ride till I get to the shallow waters where it ends. I tire quickly from fighting the conditions and the water and am unable to stay out as long as I had planned. Heading back to shore, trying to make my way against strong currents, I’m viciously toppled off the board by a violent wave. My board is flung aside, tugging my leash, and ricochets forcefully back to my side. An instant, deep bruise radiates from where it hits my ribs. I catch my breath at the pain. I need to get out of the water. Any additional moment I stay could be highly dangerous, especially with this deep, throbbing ache that clouds my mind.

  I sit on the sand for a while, nursing my physical and emotional wounds. Staring at the endless waters, I try to focus my mind on the movement and the shadows without much luck, as a pair of hazel eyes invade every other thought.

  I start to revive fragments of sentences from our conversations, starting with the perfect weekend in Baja when he told me for the first time that he loved me. He’d whispered the words I longed to hear: “I am in love with you, Hales.” And how, when we came home, he told me he couldn’t bear the thought of being away from me. The more I think about it, the more I miss him, if that’s even possible. I miss every single part of him. The sense of security and serenity I felt in the indulging cage of his embrace, the body that makes my heart race at the mere thought of it, his taste, his unbelievable heavenly Daniel taste. I think about how perfect his weight feels pressed against me. How he played my song by the fire. The tenderness of his stare and the way it made me feel.

 

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