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First Comes Love by Emily Giffin (29)

chapter twenty-eight

MEREDITH

“Well. I didn’t see that one coming,” I say after a virtually silent cab ride home. I carefully remove my shoes and hang up my coat as I make the decision not to mention Josie’s boots. Hell, she can sleep in them tonight, for all I care at the moment.

“Yeah. Me either…I mean, I knew she had moved on…but damn….” Looking glum, Josie strides over to the sofa and collapses onto it. “It was like he meant nothing to her.”

“That’s not necessarily true,” I say as I wash my hands at the kitchen sink. “We don’t know that she didn’t love him deeply….She could have been as committed as he was at the time….”

“Okay…but did you get that feeling?” Josie asks. “Because I didn’t. I mean—she didn’t even mention his name until we got to the restaurant….It just felt like she moved on, like, a couple months later.”

“Yeah. But she just gave us the CliffsNotes version of her life….She did say that one ex was jealous of Daniel….I mean, she could have been heartbroken for years.”

“Well, it would have been nice to hear that,” Josie says.

I nod again, silently noting that irony—that it would have been nice to hear a lot of things from my own sister over the years, too. It would have been nice to discuss our feelings. Or visit the cemetery together. Or acknowledge Daniel’s birthdays—and all the painful anniversaries of his death.

But I stick to a more constructive point and one I’ve come to learn well in my own life. “It’s impossible to understand someone else’s relationship. They seemed very happy together…and maybe we need to focus on that…the fact that Daniel was happy when he died.”

“She would have broken his heart,” Josie says.

“Probably so,” I agree.

Josie sighs, a deep frown on her face. “So? Did you really tell Mom we were having dinner with her?”

I shake my head.

“I knew it,” she says. “Should we tell her?”

I shrug, having already asked myself this question several times since we left the restaurant. “We should probably tell her we saw her. But skip the details.”

Josie nods in agreement. “It would upset her more than us.”

“For sure…Sophie’s been a symbol to her. Or at least a comfort…Think about the stories she always tells about that visit…and her last talk with Daniel at the kitchen table. She loves knowing that Daniel was truly happy and deeply in love…that he experienced the sweetness of that….”

“Even if he loved her way more than she loved him?” Josie says.

“Even if,” I say, my mind drifting to Nolan again, wondering if that isn’t the happier place to be—the one loving more. “Do you want a cup of tea? Or a decaf?”

She shakes her head. “No. But I’ll take some bourbon or something….Is there any hard stuff here?”

“Yep. You’re in luck,” I say, standing on an acrylic stepladder to reach the cabinet where Ellen keeps her liquor. I pull down a bottle of Widow Jane whiskey, along with a rocks glass. Then, on second thought, I grab another glass for me, pour about two shots in each, then toss in some cubes of ice from the freezer.

“God, this is depressing,” I say, walking over to the sofa and handing her one of the glasses before I sit down beside her. “I mean—what are we doing here, anyway?”

“Well. You’re here on a sabbatical,” she says. “Remember?”

“Yeah, yeah,” I say. “You know what I mean….Look at us….Here we are…fifteen years later…all screwed up…and begrudging someone else her happiness. Maybe we just need to move on?”

Josie kicks her boots off, leaving them sprawled under the coffee table, then takes a long drink. She makes a face, puts down her glass, and nods. “Yeah. I know. We really do….That’s what I was sort of trying to say earlier, when I said that all of our problems seem related to Daniel….It just feels like we’ve never really gotten over the loss…the way Sophie did.”

I nod. “Yeah. But you can’t compare a short romance—even an intense one—to a relationship with a sibling.”

“True,” she says, her face twisting into an expression of deep, profound sadness. “You really can’t.”

A long moment of silence passes before she says my name, then turns to face me, leaning on one arm of the sofa.

“Yeah?” I say, looking at her.

“I need to tell you something….” She frowns, staring down at her hands clasped in her lap.

“Okay,” I say, turning to sit sideways, facing her.

“It’s the thing I came here to tell you…about Daniel,” she says, glancing up at me with a worried expression.

Feeling suddenly cold, I pull Ellen’s nubby throw blanket from the back of the sofa and drape it over our legs. “What is it?” I say.

Josie’s big blue eyes grow glassy, her lower lip quivering. It conjures a memory of how she used to cry on demand, just to get me in trouble. But this time, I can tell it’s sincere. She’s truly on the verge of tears, and I feel the sudden urge to protect her, reaching for her hands. She breathes, in and out, for what feels like a full minute, all the while holding my gaze and hands. Then she opens her mouth and starts to tell me a story. A story about the night Daniel died. Of her getting wasted at Five Paces. Of someone from the bar calling Daniel to come pick her up, take her home. There are more details, most of them trivial, but I have trouble following them all.

“No,” I finally say, letting go of her hands, shaking my head. “That isn’t what happened. He was going out to get a burger. That’s what he told Mom.”

“He lied to Mom. He was just covering for me,” Josie says, her face starting to contort in a valiant but unsuccessful attempt not to cry. Tears spill down her cheeks as she continues, “He was on his way to get me.”

“But that’s just a theory,” I say, my heart starting to race. “Right? I mean—how would you know that he was coming to get you? He died before he got there….He could have been going to get a burger. Right?”

She doesn’t reply or move a muscle, not even to wipe her tears.

“Josie?” I demand. “You don’t know that for sure, do you?”

“Yes,” she whispers. “I do, actually.”

“But how?” I say.

“I can’t tell you how,” she says.

“Why not?” I say, becoming more frantic and angry.

“Because. I promised someone I wouldn’t….”

I kick the blanket off my legs, then stand, pacing in front of the coffee table. “What do you mean you can’t tell me how you know that? You drop a bomb like this and then pull some…some Woodward and Bernstein bullshit?”

Josie covers her face with her hands, mumbling again that she can’t, that she promised.

“He was our brother, Josie,” I say, wishing I hadn’t used the past tense, when he will always be our brother. “You’re telling me crucial details about the night our brother died, and you’re worried about a promise you made to someone else? Who was it? Shawna?” I shout.

“No,” she says through sobs. “It wasn’t Shawna.”

“Then who?”

She shakes her head, looking pained and panicked and desperate. And suddenly, just like that, I know who she’s protecting.

“Nolan,” I whisper, my heart racing, my head spinning. “Nolan called Daniel that night. To come get you.”

It is a statement, not a question—and she doesn’t deny it.

“So,” I say, my voice calm and restrained—the opposite of the way I feel inside, “what you’re telling me is that my sister…and my husband…have been keeping this secret from me for fifteen fucking years?”

“I didn’t know for sure,” Josie says, wiping away tears. “Until last weekend.”

“I don’t believe you. And besides, clearly Nolan did,” I say. “Nolan must have known that he called Daniel to come get you….”

“Please don’t tell him I told you,” she says. “I think he wanted to tell you himself….”

“Fuck. Him.” I spit out the words with as much venom as possible, my disbelief morphing into rage. “And fuck you, too.”

“Meredith,” she says. “Please…”

“Talk about a betrayal,” I say as Josie begins to bawl and beg. The sound of her gurgling sobs, the sight of her face glistening with snot and tears, only makes me hate her. I pick up one of her boots and throw it as hard as I can. It hits the wall, the heel leaving a black mark. “And what part of ‘take off your fucking shoes when you’re in the fucking house’ don’t you get, Josie?”

“I’m sorry,” she sobs. “I’m so sorry.”

“For wearing your shoes in the house? Or for not telling me that you and Nolan were responsible for Daniel’s death?” I shout.

“God. Don’t say that,” Josie says, her eyes filled with horror, her lower lip trembling. “Please don’t say that.”

“Well,” I say. “Let’s look on the bright side. At least this makes my decision to divorce him a little easier.”

“Meredith, don’t….Don’t let that happen to you….You love each other,” she says, then launches into a rambling monologue about how this has affected her relationships. That she’s been punishing herself for years. Something about Will and their breakup. Something about Gabe.

I cut her off. “Once again,” I say. “This is all about you, Josie. All about how Daniel’s death affected you.”

“No,” she says. “I just don’t want this to have an impact on your marriage, too.”

“Too late,” I say.

“I’m so sorry. He’s so sorry, too. Can’t you forgive us?”

“Talk to Daniel about forgiveness, Josie. Talk to God about that.”

“I have,” she says—which is a neat trick since I’m pretty sure she’s an atheist.

“How about Mom and Dad?” I say. “Do they know?”

She shakes her head.

“Think they’ll forgive you?” I say. “Think Mom will be okay with this twist in the story?”

“I don’t know,” she whimpers, her face red and blotchy and streaked with mascara. “I hope she can forgive me. I hope Mom and Dad both can.”

“Well, they just might,” I say, my voice quivering as I hold back my own tears, determined not to cry until I’m alone. “But I will never forgive you, Josie….Not for as long as I live.”

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