Bleak

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Bleak Page 29

by Lynn Messina


  Simon doesn’t care. “So you’re still seeing Harry?”

  “Yes,” I say automatically, then immediately backtrack when I hear the implication. “No, I’m not seeing him. I see him.” The look he gives me is so intensely furious it could make a statue tremble. “We hang out as friends. We’re not dating.”

  But Simon isn’t listening to me anymore. He’s wearing a hole in his carpet and mumbling under his breath how this was all a terrible mistake. Then he stops, turns and looks at me. “Obviously I’m wasting my time here.”

  The words make my heart stop and I open my mouth to argue but nothing comes out. My thoughts are jumbled. All I can think is no, no, no. This isn’t happening. Not over some stupid guy who doesn’t matter.

  “You don’t trust me,” Simon says wearily, “and I can’t do this with someone who doesn’t trust me.”

  I feel the tears forming as I stare at him, amazed at how wrong he has it. Somehow he’s turned the whole thing on its head. “No, you don’t trust me,” I say, swallowing hard to push back the lump in my throat. “You don’t trust me. You never have.”

  He shakes his head sadly. No one in my life has ever looked as stricken as he. “If you actually believe that, then we really have been wasting our time.”

  The tears threaten to overwhelm me. I don’t know when I’ve ever felt this despondent in my life, like any hope for the future has been washed away. All I have is the present, this one terrible moment to live in for eternity.

  Because I don’t want him to see me cry, to know that on a basic level he’s broken something vitally important inside me, I run out of his apartment, down the stairs and onto the street. I sit on the grass, pull up my legs and sob until my eyes are like sandpaper. I take several heaping gulps of air, shiver from the chilly breeze and straighten my back. I can’t sit on the curb for the rest of my life.

  I don’t have my bag with me but my keys are in my back pocket as well as my credit card from the grocery store, which I didn’t bother putting back in my wallet. I could go to the movies or the Growlery or the galleria. But what I really want is a shoulder to cry on. I feel so terribly alone.

  I drive to Harry’s. I don’t care what evil things Simon thinks in his suspicious little mind. Harry is a friend. That he was never more than that makes me sad but there’s nothing I can do about it. Some people you love; some people you don’t.

  By the time I reach Harry’s block, I feel more in control. Parking is difficult, and it takes me ten minutes to find a spot. As I walk up the drive, I realize I should probably call first. It’s a Saturday night. What if he’s not home? What if he has a date? But I don’t have my phone with me so I let it go. If he’s not home, I’ll leave. If he has a date, I’ll also leave.

  I ring the doorbell and wait impatiently. After a moment, the doorknob turns and there he is. I’m so relieved, my knees go week. “Thank God you’re here. I’ve had the worst day,” I say, stepping past him into the room, “and just needed someone to talk to.…” I trail off as I see who else is in the room: John Vholes, Howard Tulkinghorn and Joshua Smallweed. All of them are gathered around the table with four empty bottles of champagne and half-drunk wineglasses. I look at Harry, confused. He turns away.

  For a moment there is shock, a pervasive amazement that fills the room as they stare at me as dumbstruckly as I stare at them. Then Tulk holds his glass high. “Ricki, darling, we were just drinking to you. To the prettiest sucker in all of suckerdom.”

  They drink.

  The second I see them together, I understand. The scales fall from my eyes and in an instant I grasp the entire picture. From the moment Harry met me at Boodle’s, he had this scene planned. All I had to do was go along like a dumb fuck.

  Which I am.

  I don’t even feel anger. The realization of my stupidity is so overwhelming, it leaves room for nothing else but self-condemnation. This is what I deserve for being gullible and overconfident and smug and desperate and hopeful and eager and naïve. They played me like a fiddle, as the saying goes.

  John raises his glass. “Hear, hear. You were a pleasure to work with,” he says, slurring his words slightly. He’s drunk. They all are. Sober men wouldn’t rub my face in it like this. They couldn’t. Something inherently humane would stop them.

  “An absolute pleasure,” Joshua adds. “And your script was quite good. I might even make it one day.” He immediately starts giggling. “No, I won’t. Who am I kidding?”

  Turning away from them, I look at Harry, who’s standing by the door. He refuses to meet my eyes, and I discover I was wrong. There is anger inside me after all.

  As I walk toward him, a million things cluster inside my head, insults and indictments and righteous accusations, but I know it’s all a waste of time. Harry is soulless. What I took for artlessness and innocence is really an enduring emptiness, a bleak amorality that cares about nothing but its own comfort.

  It’s so obvious now. Of course it is.

  With nothing to say, I raise my hand, pull it back and slap him across the cheek so hard red welts immediately appear. His eyes glitter brightly with something resembling tears but I can’t tell if it’s from pain or shame, and I don’t care.

  Lesson one in the school of hard knocks mastered. Ricki Carstone won’t be making this mistake again.

  Without turning around, without looking at any one of them again, I walk to the door, open it and step into the cool night air feeling a hundred years old. I keep it together until I get to the car but as soon as I close the door, the grief hits me like a wall of bricks and the tears start to fall. They fall hard and fast and with so much force it feels like a summer squall has taken possession of my body. I try to regain control but it’s useless so I simply sink into it. There’s nothing else I can do.

  Every dream I’ve ever had has died.

  Day 1,338

  I wake up in the Wagon Wheel diner with my head on the table and a small puddle of drool on the cocktails-of-the-world place mat. Across the aisle, twin boys in matching Old Navy T-shirts are staring at me. Before I can even blink groggily at them, the one on the right hurls a french fry and hits me in the eye. I throw it back. Their mom, previously absorbed by the morning newspaper, catches me in the act and immediately reprimands me for provoking her two angelic children.

  It’s obvious from their full plate of fries and my empty table who the provocateur is, but I don’t bother to defend myself. I understand how it works now. Life is injustice.

  I wave down the waitress, the same one who was on shift the previous night, and ask for my check. She drops it on the table and says, “They’re never worth it, sugar,” making me think that weeping women stumbling in at one a.m. and ordering coffee and onion rings isn’t such a rare thing around here.

  My joints are stiff, and I stretch before standing up. The mischievous boys giggle at my old-lady movements and their mom throws me a dirty look. I stare blandly back, then leave.

  By the time I pull into the parking lot at Bleak, it’s after ten. Carrie and Glenn’s flight will be taking off in twenty-five minutes, so it’s safe to go home. As I wait for the elevator, I list all the things I want in descending order: shower, hot coffee, oblivion.

  Now that my houseguests are gone, I should be able to attain all three.

  I just hope someone had the sense to put the food in the fridge. I don’t want to come home to the smell of rotting beef—as if that’s the only thing in my life that stinks.

  Everything is in place when I open the door. Not only have the groceries been put away, all my papers have been returned to their files. It even looks like someone vacuumed.

  Relieved, I let the door shut behind me and walk to the kitchen to get started on my second most cherished desire. I measure the coffee, add water, plug in the machine and turn to
see Carrie sitting on the sofa,

  I jump in surprise.

  “Hey,” she says. In the same clothes as yesterday, she looks so tired I think I might have gotten more sleep in the window booth at the Wagon Wheel.

  Not that her exhaustion’s my fault.

  “Hey,” I say in response, looking around for Glenn. Maybe he’s pawing through the stuff in my bedroom again. If he is, he’s certainly doing it more quietly than last time.

  The coffee percolates as we consider each other silently. I don’t say anything because I have nothing to say. My life has collapsed, imploding violently like a played-out coal mine, but I’m still not sorry for what I said. It was mean and cruel and yet not nearly as terrible as spying on your sister. She’ll never know what it’s like to come home and find the one person you trust above all others in the act of betraying you. It’s supposed to be us versus our parents. It’s been that way since we were little girls.

  I pick up a dish towel, grasp it in my hands and wait.

  Just as the coffee’s finishing, she says, “The red was discontinued.”

  It’s the last thing I expect her to say. “What?”

  “The red cabinets from Ikea. They were discontinued. It wasn’t Glenn’s fault.”

  “All right,” I say calmly, although she doesn’t need to explain herself to me. Her life is her life, just like my life is mine.

  “He even tracked down a place in the city that also did the red. It would have cost $35,000 for the whole kitchen.”

  I take the pot off the coils and fill up a mug, which I offer to Carrie. She accepts and I pour another cup for myself.

  We sip our coffee and pretend we’re not waiting for the other one to apologize first. I know she expects me to bend a little after her explanation but I don’t. Even if he’s not responsible for the bland ashwoodness of her life, Glenn has plenty to answer for.

  After ten minutes, Carrie begins to cry. I’m tired enough of my own tears to feel impatient with someone else’s, but I bite back the mean reply that jumps to my lips.

  “God, you’re so hard,” she says, standing up. “You never give anything.”

  I don’t know what I have to give her except absolution and she has to ask for that first.

  She walks to the window and stares out at the cars passing below. “Look, I’m sorry,” she says, her back toward me. “I know it was wrong to poke through your stuff. I felt terrible doing it. Part of me was even hoping to get caught so I wouldn’t fee so dirty about it. But it’s just that you scare us.” Her tone turns accusatory as she looks at me. So much for her remorse. “We don’t know what you’re thinking anymore and you’ve moved so far away and without any notice and you never come home, not even for Christmas. What are we supposed to do? You don’t tell us anything.”

  Even as I find myself getting angry all over again—how dare she purport to be concerned when she brought him with her—I acknowledge the truth of the statement. I don’t tell them anything anymore because I know they wouldn’t approve.

  And look where it got me. If I had confided in someone who loved me, I probably wouldn’t have been swindled out of my entire inheritance.

  But even knowing how foolish it is to keep my own counsel, I still can’t bring myself to tell her what happened. I’m too ashamed. Having gotten what I deserve, I can’t stand the thought of her pitying me. It would be so much worse than I-told-you-so.

  “I’m sorry too,” I say. “I shouldn’t have said what I did about Glenn. That was entirely out of line. And he’s really not that bad.”

  “Thank you.”

  With the fragile détente in place, she turns to face the traffic again and I drink my coffee. Even though we’ve made a rough sort of peace, we’re awkward with each other. This has never happened before. It’s always been the Carstone girls against the world, not the Carstone girls against each other.

  But I don’t know how to fix it.

  The phone rings and I let the machine get it. I expect it to be Glenn giving a minute-by-minute account of his boarding process, but it’s Lester with a movie update.

  “Hi, Ricki. I know you’re wondering how the meeting with the investors went on Wednesday. According to Lloyd, they’re still interested but won’t put money in the film until the male lead is cast. Lloyd is going out with the script. It’s a tough situation to be in because the script has some problems. He’s showing it along with the notes from the director detailing what changes he plans to make but he won’t make those changes until he gets paid. So that’s where we are. I’ll let you know if the situation changes. Hope you’re well.”

  As he talks, I feel the knot inside me unwind and I start laughing, mildly at first, as if I’m not really amused, and then with full-on, breathless glee as the absurdity of the situation hits me.

  I can just see Lloyd with his inflated lips explaining with increasing desperation to yet another young hottie that this is the script they would have if only the fucking greedy director would get off his lazy ass and rewrite it. And Blake Alden—I see him sitting on a towering heap of dross, counting brass tacks as if they were pieces of eight, his belt tightening with every hunger pang.

  Self-destructive selfishness makes no sense but of course it makes beautiful sense. This is Hollywood, opposite land, where acting in your own best interest sets you back thirty paces. Every widget manufactured in this town is a collaboration and yet there is a no collective good. It’s still the gold rush mentality, with everyone staking their claim and guarding it jealously with a Winchester rifle.

  The standoff could go on forever. There’s no resolution in sight, no way out of this seemingly endless string of catch-22s. Already I’ve lost my life savings and my self-respect. The only thing left is my dream of a happy ending: a movie premiere at the Ziegfeld Theater with all my friends and family cheering as my name comes across the screen in ten-foot-high letters.

  I could go on believing in that. It would take very little effort to suppose it’s only a matter of time until Lloyd casts the film and we get the money and the movie gets made and does so well it spawns not just two sequels but a television series and a spin-off.

  Hope perches in the soul.

  But there’s nothing more destructive to the soul than a dream deferred, and I can no longer wait for it to dry up or explode. This has to end now.

  Here’s where I get off the mountain.

  I run into the bedroom and pull two duffle bags from under the bed. I toss one to Carrie.

  “Start packing,” I say. I open up the top drawer in my dresser and throw everything inside.

  Carrie stares at me, baffled. “What are you doing?”

  The second drawer is all underwear. I take ten pairs and leave the rest. “Driving you home.”

  “That’s crazy,” she says. “I’ll catch the next flight. I only stayed because I couldn’t leave without talking to you.”

  “No, you were right to be worried.” I grab my passport and close the drawer, then empty the entire contents of my jewelry box into the bag. “I’ve lost everything, so much more than you can possibly know. This place has ruined me. It’s time to leave.”

  She steps into the room, walks to my closet and takes a pair of jeans off the hanger, carefully folding them.

  “No,” I say, pulling three shirts off their hangers at once, “dump and go. Dump and go. I want to be out of here in ten minutes.”

  “What about Simon?”

  I pause for only a fraction of a second, but it’s enough to clog up my throat. No, I can’t think of Simon now. The one thing keeping me upright is not acknowledging just how much I lost. The money I can recoup. The self-respect I can regain. But there’s no getting Simon back.

  When I don’t answer her question, she says, “H
e’s worried about you. He even went out to look for you last night when you didn’t come home.”

  I know she thinks she’s trying to help, but she’s only making it worse. I can never, ever see Simon again. Love might mean never saying you’re sorry but there’s no clause about being a fucking gullible dumb fuck. Some things you screw up so badly, there’s no redeeming them.

  This is one of them.

  Carrie drops the subject and finishes stuffing clothing into the bag. I do a brief drive-by in the living room, packing up my laptop and gathering my files. I take the worthless Tad Johnson script and burn it.

  My sister comes running out of the bedroom when the smoke alarm goes off.

  “Don’t worry,” I say, climbing on a chair to remove the battery. “It’s just a little flame, easily extinguished, not a conflagration.”

  Five minutes later, we have everything. Carrie runs ahead to bring the car around and I linger by the door, my hand on the light switch, taking one last look. All the value I have in the world is in this room and yet it is valueless.

  Standing there, I think of the last time I did this—moving from one coast to another, divesting myself of all my material goods, so confident I knew what I was doing. This time I’m following through for real, starting over, leaving scorched earth behind.

  No, not scorched earth. Not yet.

  I drop my bag, walk over to the phone, dial Angela Deering at the Times, wait three rings for her to pick up and tell her to run the story.

  Now I’m free.

  February 13

  Glenn crashes with friends for a month to give me some time alone with my sister. It’s such a sweeping act of kindness, I’m forced to concede he’s really a nice guy. Carrie, in her turn, admits that the touching is a little much, especially when she’s trying to eat ribs, which really can’t be done with one hand, and that she has talked to Glenn about it several times. He keeps promising to do better but so far has made no progress. Despite his nice-guyness and all, I still think he needs professional help.

 

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