All the Difference

Home > Other > All the Difference > Page 17
All the Difference Page 17

by Leah Ferguson


  Molly climbed the stairs to her brownstone and entered the living room, ensuring the door was still locked on her arrival as always. Instinctively, she checked the time on the clock above the mantel. It was almost eight thirty. From what she knew of children, most of the young ones had long been tucked into bed by this time. She had concocted a fantasy of a working single mom’s evening at home. But the reality was, that mom probably wasn’t doing something idyllic like putting a casserole into the oven this late in the evening. She was more likely frantically trying to feed and change her child and put her to bed without so much as a bath or a book, because she knew the crying baby was so overtired by this point she’d take hours to settle down. Dinner for the mother would be a bowl of cereal at eleven o’clock while wearing pajamas she pulled out of the hamper because there weren’t any clean clothes in the drawers. She would collapse into bed, exhausted, promising herself that she’d wake up early to prepare that last report for work, that she’d wash the bottles tomorrow, spend time with the baby the next night. Molly’s fantasy was evaporating like the bubbles from the imaginary bath she wouldn’t have the luxury to give.

  Molly set her pocketbook on the entranceway table and looked around her tidy living room. She placed a hand on her belly and took one more glance at the clock, thinking of herself months from now, a woman with her arms full of all she was responsible for in the world. That woman was alone, and Molly would bet good money that having the support of people who loved her was a security she needed more than just being able to say she could do it on her own. Molly took a deep breath and leaned back against the closed door, defeated.

  She’d just made a decision.

  CHAPTER NINE

  August

  Yes

  “Jenny, I don’t know about this. I swear, if Scott weren’t working late, and if I hadn’t spent the entire day scrubbing baseboards, I never would have let you talk me into this.”

  They were in Midtown Village, standing in the middle of Drury Street outside of McGillin’s Olde Ale House, their old go-to for work happy hours. They had purchased tickets months earlier to see a concert later that evening, and Jenny had talked Molly into making a night of it. Jenny was now trying to psych her up to go into the pub and meet a large group of their old friends, but Molly remained planted in her spot on the pavement. Most of their former coworkers from Shulzster & Grace were already inside, and Molly dreaded having to face them for the first time since her mortifying exit. She felt uncomfortable and lumpy in black stretch capris and a silky pink tunic-style maternity tank top. Even with some cute flat flip-flops she’d picked up at Bloomingdale’s and a couple of funky silver bangles on her arms and big hoops in her ears, she felt like a fraud. Only little, hip, cute people should be out at bars like this, she thought, looking over her friend. Jenny was wearing skinny jeans paired with an incredibly high pair of metallic gold sandals. Like Molly, she’d worn them with a tank top, but hers was shimmering and backless. She wore her hair down and had loaded up on the beaded jewelry. She looks like a hippie goddess, Molly thought. And I look like Buddha.

  “Come on, preggers.” Jenny did a sort of bounce in front of Molly and tugged on her hand. “It’ll be fun. They’re supposed to be our friends, remember? And when was the last time you actually went out and had a good time? I swear, that fiancé of yours is keeping you locked in your tower like Rapunzel.”

  “Well, my hair has gotten a little too long for my tastes . . .” Molly twirled the ends of her dark hair around her finger.

  “You’re ridiculous, and you’re kind of driving me crazy a little bit. Your hair looks beautiful, as does the rest of you, lady. Have you taken a good look at yourself in a mirror?” Jenny waved both of her hands up and down at Molly’s now-voluptuous form. “You’re working this baby bump you’ve got going to the max, and you have that glow I always thought people were lying about. So, look. I didn’t get all dressed up to stand outside in this heat. I’m trying to forget my sorrows, and we’ve got a fun night ahead of us. Let’s go inside and get it started. What do you say?”

  Jenny seized Molly’s arm and pulled her to the doorway. Molly was no more looking forward to standing in that crowded bar than she was to childbirth, but she had to laugh at her friend’s enthusiasm, and allowed herself to be pulled up to the bouncer before hesitating again.

  “Wait a minute, Jenny,” she said to her friend’s back. “What sorrows are you talking about? You’ve got a perfectly good husband sitting at home, weeping into his spaghetti, wondering why you want to be anywhere but with him. Especially when he didn’t do anything wrong.”

  “Don’t you try bringing up my personal life as a stalling tactic, Molly,” Jenny said. “I’m not falling for it.”

  Molly saw that Jenny had slowed down, though. “All I’m saying is that you guys are supposed to have patched this all up. I’m all about a girls’ night, but you moved back home so you could make it better. I’m sensing some avoidance here.”

  Her friend was pointedly ignoring her. Molly tugged on Jenny’s arm until she stopped walking.

  “Jenny. It’s like the only thing keeping you from being happy again with Dan is your own stubbornness. You can’t be afraid of being content. It’s not going to jinx you. It doesn’t work that way.”

  Molly knew her best friend, and she also knew tonight was just another way for Jenny to run away from her issues. Jenny only knew how to walk a straight line, and any deviation from that paralyzed her. She’d always done so well in her life that she’d never had a chance to learn how to fix the bad when it happened. And now Molly was so exasperated she let the words tumble out of her mouth before she could run them through her usual filter.

  “You know how you asked me if you were being a shit?” Molly finally asked. Jenny’s eyes widened before she even finished her thought. “Well, you’re kind of being a shit.” She paused. “No offense.”

  Jenny gaped at Molly in shock. “When did Molly Sullivan get so blunt?”

  Molly laughed. “When she saw her best friend making a dumb mistake, that’s when. Isn’t that what I’m supposed to do, save you from yourself?”

  Jenny chuckled. “Yeah, I suppose so. I’ll just have to remember that when it’s your turn to get a talking-to.”

  Molly shook her head. “Nah. I’ve got my life locked down and under control. You know me.”

  She smirked, but the words didn’t come out as blithely as she’d intended. Molly saw Jenny’s look of concern and ignored it by digging around in her bag for her wallet. Ever since their last big disagreement, Scott had acted like an extraordinarily good-looking puppy that had been caught misbehaving. He spoke overly softly now, showering her with kisses and enthusiastic compliments, bringing her frequent bouquets of massive flowers. Molly was trying so hard to forget his gloating, his refusal to budge, but it was difficult with Scott’s constant reminders that he’d hurt her in the first place, that he had something to make up for.

  “I’m right, aren’t I, though?” Molly asked. “About Dan? I feel guilty knowing he’s got to be totally confused and heartbroken, and he’s not even my husband.”

  “Yeah.” Jenny tried to laugh. “But that’s just because you like to fix everything.”

  “Still.”

  Jenny started to take a step, then stopped again. “I know, okay?” Her voice was tight. “You’re right. Fine. I said it.”

  “So why don’t you call him? Invite him out with us?”

  “Because I don’t really want to, Molly. I mean, I do, but . . . I don’t know. I’ve been stubborn, and I admit I possibly made a dumbass move by moving out. And moving back in hasn’t gone so well, either.” Jenny used one hand to rub at her eyes. The air around them was heavy with humidity. They were just steps away from the air conditioning—and noise, and people, and sticky floors—of the bar. “But honestly, Mol, I was just looking forward to a night out when I didn’t have to think about any of
that stuff. Does that make sense?”

  She was standing beside Molly on the sidewalk between the street and bar, frozen. “Can I tell you something, Molly? Since we’re being blunt? It was almost a relief to think that maybe Dan had cheated on me, that maybe he just wanted out, or was just as selfish as my dad. Then I wouldn’t have to feel like I was disappointing him anymore.” Jenny looked down at the sidewalk.

  “Disappointing Dan? The guy’s been in love with you since high school,” Molly protested.

  “Yeah, I know,” Jenny said. “And I can’t help feeling like I should stop wasting his time. That maybe this marriage has run its course.”

  Molly shook her head. “You’re Catholic. Even if you don’t go to church, I know you. That’s not a possibility.”

  “I’m serious, Molly. Maybe this was a sign he should get out while he can. Find someone who can give him income and babies and the perfect family life. A woman whose body works the way it should.” She took a breath. “Somebody who isn’t broken.”

  “Shit, Jenny.”

  “Yeah, I know.” Jenny looked to the side. “It finally hits the fan, right?”

  “Girl, what am I going to do with you?” Molly threw her arm around her friend’s shoulders and squeezed. “Dan didn’t marry you just to break up during an incredibly rough spot. It makes total sense for you to need to take a breather. But for the last time, you should let Dan be with you during that breather. Let him help you. It’s all he wants to do.”

  She was so exasperated. Of course Jenny was right about Molly’s impulse to fix problems, but this issue had an easy solution. Molly had always wondered why people needed to complicate perfectly good lives. Tonight, though, she could admit that it was often easier to see the answer to a question when you stood outside of the equation.

  Jenny chuckled, then shook her head. “Okay, but you’re still not getting out of this tonight. I’ll sit down with him tomorrow and have a proper talk, get it all out on the table, I promise. But right now I just need something to shake me up. Get me out of this funk.”

  “Well,” Molly said, showing the bouncer outside the front entrance her ID, “a margarita should get you started.”

  As soon as they entered the dark confines of the historic pub, Molly and Jenny spotted their old friends from S&G crowded around groups of two-tops shoved together, forming large islands of tables filled with bottles and half-full glasses. Laughter rang out at frequent intervals, bouncing back down from the dark wooden beams on the ceiling. Large mirrors that reflected the weak light to the packed room hung on walls that also featured framed photos of celebrities and antique photographs of the city. A gigantic American flag hung from the same dark rafters.

  Someone in the group saw them enter and waved them over. The two women exchanged one uncomfortable glance before pasting brave smiles on their faces to approach their old colleagues. Molly maneuvered her belly around drunk men in loosened ties, their dark hair gelled and faces beginning to show the stubble of Friday night, and squealing women with South Philly accents, all freed for the weekend from the pressures of their work in the publishing and government and insurance offices of Center City. At the very least, she figured, she might run into somebody who had a lead or a contact for her—even if, as Scott kept reminding her, no one was going to want to hire a pregnant woman. Molly shook the thought out of her head. One of her favorite songs from the Pogues, “Fairtytale of New York,” began playing over the loudspeakers, and she bounced a little to the sound as she walked. Within minutes, she and Jenny were engulfed in laughter with their old friends. Molly allowed herself, finally, to relax, knowing it wouldn’t be for very long.

  An hour later, she stood between two stools at the long, straight bar on the first floor. She’d been surrounded by a throng of people three deep, but Pat, the middle-aged Friday night bartender, had recognized her and motioned for people to give her space to get through. Jenny was still back at the tables in the center of the room, surrounded by people and laughing her way through her third margarita.

  “Molly Sullivan, old girl!” Pat reached out for one of her hands in a jolly, familiar gesture as his other pulled a pint from the tap. Liquor bottles stood like sentinels on the glass shelves behind him, stacked against the mirrored wall like guards of her past.

  “Hey, Pat! It’s good to see you!” Molly exclaimed, and leaned forward, using her forearms to prop herself on the bar. “It’s been a long time, buddy.”

  “I’ll say,” Pat replied. “It’s not often I get to see a beautiful face like yours around these parts.” He didn’t seem to notice the glare of the woman standing next to Molly. “What’ll you have, Molly? Your usual?”

  He dropped a handful of ice in a short glass with practiced speed and had his hand around a bottle of Johnnie Walker before she could stop him.

  “Not for me, Pat, not today,” she laughed, and backed away from the bar. “Or for the next couple of months or so.” The bartender’s eyes widened when he saw the reason for her restraint. He quietly opened a bottle of sparkling water and poured it, instead of the whiskey, into the glass. He was nodding, but to Molly’s relief, not asking questions. He tucked a slice of lime onto the rim and slid it across the bar to her without a sound.

  “Well, you certainly made somebody speechless.” Molly heard the laughing voice from beside her, and a forgotten shiver ran through her body. “I see you haven’t lost your touch.”

  The shock from hearing a memory speak aloud rooted her into place for a moment. Then Molly turned to face the man who was now grinning at her, his nose scrunching up between the blue of his deep-set eyes in exactly the way she remembered. Her heart lurched in her chest, and Molly felt her face break open into a wide smile before she could catch herself.

  “Liam.”

  His dusty brown hair was the same as it had been, his eyelashes dark and thick, and his eyes a shining cobalt. Molly felt her cheeks flush hot. The din of the bar seemed to fall away, and for a moment, neither of them said a word.

  Liam was facing her, leaning against the bar with a casual lack of self-consciousness. His expression was open, and his genuine, elated grin made Molly feel for a moment like she did when she drove her car down an open highway: exhilarated, free, but still with the assurance that she was buckled up safely. Liam watched her, taking in her face with an appreciation that was honest, yet tentative. He held a full pint of Guinness in one hand.

  “Molly.” His voice still held the same earnest warmth. “Hey. It’s good to see you again.”

  “You, too.” Molly smiled and, for all her effort, could not make the muscles in her face go slack. “It’s good to see you, too.”

  She couldn’t think of anything more to add. For a brief moment, with Liam standing so close to her, with the clamor of pub-goers calling out for drinks muted by the sound of the blood pounding through her veins, the weight of her troubles fell away. For that second, Molly forgot that she was pregnant, that she had a fiancé at home, that she was unemployed. She had no worries or fears about the weeks and months to come. They suddenly became the minor details of her life, the extraneous, the silly little minutiae that didn’t really matter, especially when she was surrounded by the noise of the bar and the dim light and the knowledge that Liam was right in front of her. How Molly wished she could live inside a bubble of that feeling.

  Liam smiled at her and placed his beer on the bar. As he leaned forward and lightly touched her elbow with his hand, all Molly could focus on was the feeling of her nerve endings sparking and the ocean-blue eyes of the man in front of her.

  “How’ve you been? It’s so funny to see you here. My brother and I are going to that concert at the Electric Factory later and stopped in on a whim to get a drink.”

  “You guys are going tonight?” Molly touched his arm before she could stop herself. “My friend and I are going to that show, too. I heard tickets sold out in twenty minutes.” The
band playing that night had recently exploded onto the popular scene, bringing with it a mix of bluegrass and folk music that quickly became trendy among other indie groups. Neither of them mentioned that it had been Molly who introduced Liam to the band’s music, years earlier, on an impromptu weekend road trip to Maine because one of them wanted a lobster roll. Liam cleared his throat.

  “So, I just ran into a couple of the guys from the office.” He cocked his head, curious. He hadn’t seemed to notice the swell of her belly under her shirt. “Word on the street is that life has gotten a little, um, busy for you?”

  Molly laughed at his polite phrasing. “What have you heard?”

  “Well, let’s see. Apparently, you’re what they call a ‘freelancer’ now—” Liam grinned when Molly groaned.

  “Well, that’s the kindest way to say it, yes.”

  “—and that you, for all intents and purposes, have settled down.”

  So he’d known about the pregnancy, but was being discreet. Molly could have hugged him.

  “I’m glad you’re happy, Molly, really.” Liam paused for a moment and watched her face. Molly was very aware of the distance between them, the inches between his body and hers, and the impulse to lay her hand over his and keep it there.

  Molly’s smile faltered. “Well, you know. Thank you.” She swallowed hard. She noticed new laugh lines around Liam’s eyes, and was startled by an urge to reach out and run her fingertips along them. She shook her head and chuckled. “I can’t pretend I’m not itching to get another job, though.”

 

‹ Prev