Forgive Me

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Forgive Me Page 4

by Amanda Eyre Ward

“I’m asleep,” said Nadine.

  The door nudged open anyway. “Nadine,” said Gwen, “I wanted to see if you’d join us tonight for the Christmas tree lighting at the library.”

  Nadine sat up.

  “You’re not asleep,” said Gwen accusingly.

  “I’m in my nightgown,” said Nadine, pointing to Garfield’s smiling mouth.

  “And it suits you,” said Gwen. She nodded, and the holiday bells on her headband jingled.

  “Thanks for inviting me,” said Nadine. “I appreciate it. But I’m a little tired.” She did not add, I’m a little tired of you trying to make a daughter out of me.

  Gwen pursed her lips and blew air from her nose.

  “Gwen, I’m sorry,” said Nadine. “I guess I’m just not a holiday person. I’d like to be alone, if you don’t mind.”

  “It’s not fair,” said Gwen. “She took Christmas right away from you both.”

  “What?” said Nadine sharply.

  “Of course she couldn’t help it,” said Gwen. “But dying the week before Christmas…I cried when Jim told me about your mother.”

  Nadine bit her tongue.

  “And I’ve been wanting to be a mother to you ever since,” continued Gwen. “I never had a baby of my own, but God sent me you, Nadine.”

  “Please stop,” said Nadine.

  “She was beautiful,” said Gwen. “I’ve seen the pictures of your mom. That long dark hair, just like yours. And she was smart, all those books.”

  “I said please stop,” said Nadine, raising her voice. She avoided meeting Gwen’s eyes, staring out the window instead. It was snowing, fat wet drops. Nadine had not seen snowflakes in a long time.

  “This isn’t the way I had planned—”

  “I’m sorry you had a whole scene laid out for yourself,” said Nadine, turning back to Gwen. She tried, and failed, to keep the bitterness from her voice. “A big hug and a brand-new daughter to love. I suppose you wanted me to be in the wedding, right? Maybe wanted to get married on Christmas, make up for my mother’s death?”

  “Nadine.”

  “I’m sorry,” said Nadine, stopping her tirade with effort. “I just…I don’t think you have any right—”

  “I thought we could go to the tree lighting,” said Gwen. “I thought, maybe, eggnog…” Her voice trailed off.

  “Everyone has a fantasy,” said Nadine. “Sorry, Gwen. No offense. Mine doesn’t include a new mother. Or eggnog, for that matter.”

  “We could sit by the fire—”

  “Gwen—”

  “Nadine,” said Gwen. “I’m reaching out. Honey, I’m here.”

  Nadine was overwhelmed with fury and unhappiness. “You know what,” she said, “I’ve got to go.” She pulled her father’s overcoat off the floor, awkwardly draped it over her nightgown. She tugged on jeans and took her prescription bottles from the bedside table. With her good hand, she stuffed her backpack and slung it over her shoulder. Gwen watched silently. Then, with little aplomb, Nadine walked out the door.

  “Oh, honey,” said Gwen, but Nadine was down the stairs already, feeling stronger with each step.

  Under a full-moon sky, Nadine walked toward Surf Drive. The wind was painful on her face and her wrist ached. Cold burrowed inside her coat, chilling Nadine to the bone. After about fifteen minutes, she saw the familiar outline of her childhood home.

  The house had been built for a whaling captain, and had a turret with dizzying views of the sea. Jim and Ann had bought it in complete disrepair as newlyweds, spent every weekend working on the foundation, the floors, the nursery.

  Ann died when Nadine was six, but Jim and Nadine stayed put. The house was miserably quiet without Ann’s noisy cooking, the records of Broadway shows she’d played day and night. Ann had filled the freezer with home-cooked dinners when she still felt well, but they eventually ran out. On the night they ate the last dinner, a turkey potpie, Jim finished his meal and then stood. “Going to have to work late from now on,” he said, his eyes red and his voice unsteady.

  “Can we play Chutes and Ladders?” Nadine asked.

  “Hannah’s going to stay and have dinner with you,” said Jim. “She’ll put you to bed, et cetera.” Hannah was the first nanny, a young Irish woman who gazed at Nadine and said “You poor wee one” all the time.

  “Daddy,” said Nadine, “can we play Chutes and Ladders?”

  “One round,” said Jim, “then it’s the bathtub for you.”

  Jim and Nadine rarely ate together on weeknights after that potpie. Hannah was followed by Hillary, Clare, and then Laura. Sometimes Nadine heard her father come home after she had gone to bed. He would open a can of beer—Nadine could hear the pop of the tab—and sit in front of the television. Many mornings, Nadine found him asleep in his easy chair, still dressed. She would climb into his lap, and he would let himself hold her. She rested her head on his shoulder and made her hair spread across his face. He breathed deeply, and Nadine knew that he still loved her, though when he woke, he pushed her away, saying, “Off me now, monkey.”

  Nadine loved Sunday, when Jim brought her to dinner at The Captain Kidd. They walked into town and ate scallops by the fireplace or at a table overlooking Eel Pond. The walks from their house to town were Nadine’s favorite times. Jim would ask her about her homework, offer suggestions. All week, she thought of funny stories to tell him. And when the sidewalk narrowed, he took her hand.

  Nadine stood in front of the house for a moment, then drew a breath and walked across the lawn, her boots making footprints in the snow. She treaded gingerly up the front steps, felt the icy doorknob. She tried the handle: the house was locked. Now that Jim had found Gwen, 310 Surf Drive was empty. Gwen had tried to convince Jim to sell it, she told Nadine, but he had resisted, saying he wanted to wait for the market to pick up.

  Snow crunched as Nadine made her way to the back sliding glass door. As always, it was unlocked. Nadine flipped the light and looked around the kitchen. The fireplace was clean, the cabinets empty. She moved through the high-ceilinged dining room to the staircase. The house smelled familiar, a faded fragrance of talcum powder and wood smoke.

  In the second-floor foyer, Nadine fumbled in the dark for the cord that would bring down the steps. She found it and yanked. The ceiling door protested with a rusty groan. Nadine climbed the steps to the turret.

  The circular room was lit with a soft glow. This had once been the place where a woman would sit and watch the horizon for her husband’s—or son’s—ship to sail home after years at sea. As a child, Nadine dreamed of being the one on a boat, heading toward adventure and away from her lonely house.

  She sat in the rocking chair by the bookcase, where Ann had loved to spend evenings reading. Outside the window, waves crashed to shore. Nadine knelt on the floor and ran her fingers over her mother’s books until she came to The Lying Days by Nadine Gordimer. On the back of the book was a picture of an elegant woman with gold hoop earrings and twinkling eyes. Ann had named Nadine for the author of her favorite book, a story of a South African girl trying to find her place in the world.

  The book was scribbled in, a few pages folded down. Nadine opened it. On page 366, her mother had underlined, “I’m so happy where I am.” Nadine was surprised to find, when she read the book herself, that the narrator speaks this line on the eve of her departure to Europe. The narrator accepts “disillusion as a beginning rather than an end: the last and most enduring illusion.” But Ann had not underlined that realization.

  “I guess I won’t get to see the whole world,” Ann had said in the hospital, her violet eyes luminous in her sunken face. “But you’ll see it for me, won’t you? Send postcards to me in heaven.” Nadine accompanied her mother to all the chemotherapy treatments, and grew to hate the chicken soup stench of the hospital, the sickly people, the useless fight against death.

  “Is Mommy going to be okay?” Nadine asked her father the last, long night.

  “Don’t ask questions,” said Jim hoarsely, “
and I won’t have to lie to you.”

  Nadine rubbed her tender wrist. She heard footsteps coming up the turret stairs, and dropped the book. A voice rose: “Nadine?” It was Lily, walking up with effort. When she appeared, she smiled. “I knew it,” she said.

  “Hey,” said Nadine.

  “Your dad called me,” said Lily. “He thought I might know where to find you.”

  Nadine shoved the book back in its place, but Lily sat down heavily on the floor and said, “Nadine Gordimer?”

  “Don’t make fun of me,” said Nadine.

  “I’m not,” said Lily. “It’s freezing.”

  Nadine sighed. “Fucking Gwen,” she said.

  “She’s all right,” said Lily.

  “Please,” said Nadine. “Have you seen the holiday outfits?”

  “She means well,” said Lily.

  “I just don’t belong here,” said Nadine. “I never have.”

  “I’m here, though,” said Lily.

  Nadine put her head on Lily’s shoulder. When Lily reached for her hand, their fingers laced together. They sat in silence, watching Vineyard Sound.

  Eight

  Nadine spent a sleepless night on Lily’s couch. Dennis, flushed from cans of Budweiser, had sat with his giant hands covering his knees and told Nadine which septic systems in town his company had installed. “And underneath the coffee shop?” he said. “Wait till you hear this, Nadine.”

  One baby or another screamed all night long. By morning, Nadine was on the edge of a nervous breakdown. In a bathroom covered with celebrity magazines and plastic bath toys, she combed her hair with her fingers and tried to make a plan. She had to get back to her quiet apartment in Mexico City. Bo burst in and screamed, “Nadine going peep in the potty!”

  “I’m going to need some time by myself,” said Nadine. “Okay, honey?”

  “Nadine going poop in the potty!” cried Bo, bouncing on the balls of his feet.

  Without thinking, Nadine tried to push the door closed, but Bo’s fingers were in the way. He looked at his hand, stunned, and then began to wail.

  “Oh, shit,” said Nadine. “I’m really sorry, Bo. Can this be a secret?”

  Lily came upstairs, carrying a basket of clean laundry. She looked at Nadine quizzically, then put down the laundry and gathered Bo in her arms. Bo sobbed, “Nadine go peep in the potty! Nadine hurt me!”

  Nadine stood and pulled up her pants. “Time for me to head on out,” she said.

  “Sorry,” said Hank, as Nadine sat on an examining table in a borrowed T-shirt and jeans. “Did I hear you correctly? You want money for a bus ticket?”

  “I need to get to Logan,” said Nadine, “and they don’t take credit cards at the bus station.”

  Hank crossed his arms and leaned back against a counter lined with glass bottles of tongue depressors and Q-tips.

  “Anyone going to meet you at the airport?” he asked.

  “Sure, yes. I don’t need to remind you, Hank, but I am an adult.”

  “I don’t need to remind you, Nadine, but I don’t have to give you bus fare.”

  “Fine,” said Nadine, sliding off the table. She turned and banged her left arm, sending pain shooting to her wrist. Nadine gritted her teeth.

  “I have a house on Nantucket,” said Hank. “I’m headed there for the holidays. Why don’t you join me?”

  “Thank you,” said Nadine. “That’s nice. I’m fine, though. I just need to get back to Mexico City.” She tried to catch her breath and ignore the dizziness, the dark patches at the edges of her vision.

  “I love to cook,” said Hank, “and there’s a bar with good burgers downtown. I can push you there in my wheelbarrow.”

  Nadine tried to smile, and shook her head.

  “You won’t make it to Mexico City,” said Hank. “Nadine, you’re still on some strong painkillers, and your body has undergone a serious trauma. You’ll pass out at the bus station.”

  “I have friends who can help me.” Nadine wasn’t sure this was true, and the room did look fuzzy. Oh hell, she thought. She envisioned the long security line at the airport. She thought about her empty apartment, the meaningless flirtations with the fact checker next door. She wanted so desperately to get back to work, but she couldn’t travel, not like this. She had to sit down, just for a little while.

  “Okay,” said Hank. “Thought I’d give it a shot. It’s lonely out there. You take care, Nadine. Have a great holiday.”

  “All right,” said Nadine. “All right, fine.”

  “Let me help you to the door,” said Hank. “Do you want to take your records, or should we fax them to your doctor in Mexico?”

  “I said fine,” said Nadine.

  “What?”

  “Let’s go,” said Nadine. “I don’t…I said, okay. Let’s go to Nantucket. But I’ll need…I need some clothes.”

  “They have clothes on Nantucket,” said Hank.

  “I shudder to think,” said Nadine.

  “You’re my second-to-last appointment. I was planning on catching the four PM ferry.”

  “I’ll be in your lobby,” said Nadine.

  The receptionist did not appear to notice as Nadine sat down in an orange plastic chair and paged through the Cape Cod Times. She finished the paper, three old People magazines, and one Travel + Leisure before Hank appeared.

  Nine

  Sun shone on the water as the ferry moved out of Hyannis Harbor and past expensive gray homes. Next to Nadine and Hank, an old woman petted her dog. The dog’s collar was printed with tiny lobsters.

  “Look,” said Nadine, “a yacht.” She pointed. It was a lovely boat, its sails bound in blue cloth. “Or I guess you’d call that a sailboat.”

  “Definitely a sailboat,” said Hank. “Didn’t you grow up here?”

  “Sort of,” said Nadine.

  “What does that mean?”

  “I don’t remember it much,” said Nadine. “My life started after I left.”

  “Coffee?” said Hank.

  “Great.”

  Nadine watched his red T-shirt as he walked away. The shirt had an ice cream cone on the back. His jeans were faded, and his hiking boots looked well worn. Hank’s thick black curls needed a trim.

  The ferry rocked slowly. Hank returned a few minutes later, balancing a cardboard tray of coffees in one hand. “Cream and sugar?” he said.

  “Neither,” said Nadine.

  “I figured,” said Hank, handing her a paper cup.

  “At what point does a sailboat become a yacht?” said Nadine.

  “Hm,” said Hank. “Fifteen feet? Twenty?”

  “Oh,” said Nadine. “Well, you learn something every day.”

  “Do you?”

  Nadine sipped her coffee. “You know,” she said, “I do.”

  “I envy you, then.”

  “I love my job,” said Nadine.

  “Yes,” said Hank, “you’ve said that.”

  “Why do you sound as if you don’t believe me?”

  “I used to work in an emergency room in Boston,” said Hank. “At first, it was great. You know, it was what I was trained to do. Someone ODs, or comes in with a broken leg, I know how to handle it. At work, I was happy. I guess it was somewhat like you said. I felt alive. But I couldn’t…I couldn’t switch it off. I mean, you walk out the door, you know, you walk outside, but those patients are still…you’re supposed to go on home, have a beer, relax. I’d take the T, twenty minutes, and then my wife would be opening the door, wanting to go see a movie or talk about new paint for the living room…it was strange. It got to me. I felt as if I couldn’t stop, not for a minute. I didn’t like who I turned into. I didn’t like who I was, outside the ER.”

  “I could stop,” said Nadine.

  “Okay,” said Hank.

  A man began to spray bright yellow cleanser on the ferry window, wiping it afterward with a thin blade. He wore a jacket that read STEAMSHIP AUTHORITY. There were two patches on his jacket: an American flag, and his
name, JEFF. Jeff was sweaty and had a pimple in the center of his forehead. He sprayed the cleanser and wiped it away.

  “Gwen told me your wife, um,” said Nadine.

  The old woman began patting her dog and talking to it. “We had a wonderful morning, didn’t we?” she said. “You saw your friend Austin, didn’t you?” The dog, like Hank, did not respond.

  “Gwen told me your wife, well, went on a Carnival Cruise ship…this can’t be true…”

  “No,” said Hank, “it is true. We went on the cruise together. It was a theme cruise.”

  “I don’t want to ask,” said Nadine.

  “‘Bring Back the Zing,’” said Hank, staring at Jeff, who sprayed and wiped.

  “Pardon?” said Nadine. “The zing?”

  “You heard me,” said Hank. “It was for couples. ‘Bring Back the Zing.’ It was my idea.”

  “Oh, Hank,” said Nadine.

  “I’d been working around the clock. I knew Maryjane was unhappy. I thought that maybe if I got far enough away, I could shut off. I could…talk about her, pay attention to her.” He rubbed his forehead with his fingers. “I got us tickets on ‘Bring Back the Zing.’ We were supposed to make love from Miami to Bermuda.”

  “But Gwen said…and again, this cannot be true—”

  “Oh it’s true,” said Hank. “Hercules Kalapoulou.”

  “Hercules?”

  “You might ask yourself, as I did, why a divorced Greek businessman booked a room on ‘Bring Back the Zing.’ But Maryjane didn’t ask any questions. When the cruise was over, so was our marriage.”

  “I don’t know what to say,” said Nadine.

  “I went back to the ER for a year, and then decided I wanted a quieter life. A small community. I guess I wanted a home. Falmouth needed a generalist. And that’s the story.”

  Nadine shook her head. “Wow.”

  Hank nodded. “I suppose I can see the humor in it now,” he said, one side of his mouth turning up. He continued to look out the window. Nadine couldn’t tell if he was seeing Jeff or the water beyond Jeff. The glass did not look any clearer.

 

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