I’m afraid.
No need to go into it, either.
GrannyLizzie: I hope you will be able to soon . . .
thedoctorisin: That makes two of us!
She signs off, and I drain my glass. Set it on the desk.
I push one foot against the floor, set the chair slowly spinning. The walls revolve before me.
I will promote healing and well-being. I did that today.
I close my eyes. I’ve helped Lizzie prepare for life, helped her live it a little more fully. Helped her find relief.
I will place others’ interests above my own. Well, yes—but I benefited, too: For nearly ninety minutes, the Russells retreated from my brain. Alistair, that woman, even Ethan.
Even Jane.
The chair drifts to a halt. When I open my eyes, I’m looking through the doorway, into the hall, into Ed’s library.
And I think about what I haven’t told Lizzie, what I didn’t get to tell her.
53
Olivia refused to return to the room, so Ed remained with her while I packed, my heart booming. I trudged back to the lobby, where the flames were simmering low in the grate, and Marie dragged my credit card through a reader. She wished us folks a pleasant evening, her smile absurdly broad, her eyes wide.
Olivia reached for me. I looked at Ed; he took the bags, slung one over each shoulder. I gripped our daughter’s hot little hand in my own.
We’d parked in the far corner of the lot; by the time we reached the car, we were starchy with flakes. Ed popped the trunk, stuffed the luggage inside, while I swept my arm across the windshield. Olivia clambered into the backseat, slamming the door after herself.
Ed and I stood there, at opposite ends of the car, as the snow fell on us, between us.
I saw his mouth move. “What?” I asked.
He spoke again, louder. “You’re driving.”
I drove.
I drove out of the lot, tires squealing on the frost. I drove into the road, snowflakes thrilling against the windows. I drove onto the highway, into the night, into the white.
All was silent, just the hum of the engine. Beside me, Ed gazed dead ahead. I checked the mirror. Olivia was slumped in her seat, head bobbing against her shoulder—not asleep, but eyes half-shuttered.
We coasted around a bend. I gripped the wheel harder.
And suddenly the chasm opened up next to us, that vast pit gouged from the earth; now, under the moon, the trees below glowed like ghosts. Flakes of snow, silver and dark, tumbled into the gorge, down, down, lost forever, mariners drowned in the deep.
I lifted my foot from the gas.
In the rearview I watched Olivia as she peered through the window. Her face was shiny; she’d been crying again, in silence.
My heart cracked.
My phone buzzed.
* * *
Two weeks earlier we’d attended a party, Ed and I, at the house across the park, the Lord place—holiday cocktails, all glossy drinks and mistletoe sprigs. The Takedas were there, and the Grays (the Wassermen, our host told me, declined to RSVP); one of the grown Lord children put in a cameo, girlfriend in tow. And Bert’s colleagues from the bank, legions of them. The house was a war zone, a minefield, air-kisses popping at every step, cannon-fire laughter, backslaps like bombs.
Midway through the evening, midway through my fourth glass, Josie Lord approached.
“Anna!”
“Josie!”
We embraced. Her hands fluttered over my back.
“Look at your gown,” I said.
“Isn’t it?”
I didn’t know how to respond. “It is.”
“But look at you in slacks!”
I gestured to my pants. “Look at me.”
“I had to retire my shawl just a moment ago—Bert spilled his . . . oh, thank you, Anna,” as I tweezed a length of hair from her glove. “Spilled his wine all over my shoulder.”
“Bad Bert!” I sipped.
“I told him he’s in a lot of trouble later. This is the second time . . . oh, thank you, Anna,” as I pinched another filament from her dress. Ed always said I was a hands-on drunk. “Second time he’s done that to my shawl.”
“The same shawl?”
“No, no.”
Her teeth were round and off-white; I was reminded of the Weddell seal, which, I’d recently learned from a nature program, uses its fangs to clear holes in Antarctic ice fields. “Its teeth,” the narrator had pointed out, “become badly worn down.” Cue shot of seal thrashing its jaws against the snow. “Weddell seals die young,” added the narrator, ominously.
“Now, who’s been calling you all night?” asked the Weddell seal before me.
I went still. My phone had buzzed steadily throughout the evening, humming against my hip. I