He'd spent more time thinking about his wife in the past twenty-four hours than in the past twenty-four years. He'd relied on his knowledge of her in planning what to say. He'd distilled it down to a script, which he'd practiced on the flight across the country.
But the woman he'd just spoken to wasn't his Birdie.
We aren't happy. We haven't been happy in a long time.
Those two sentences had ruined all of his plans. He'd been scared by them, terrified, even. That was when he'd known she was serious. Fear had immediately put him on the defensive, made him say what he'd never intended to say, never even thought about.
He slumped over the steering wheel, listening to the rain. Always the rain in this godforsaken place.
He almost turned the car around. The urge to go to her, to take her in his arms and beg for forgiveness was so strong he felt choked by it. Desperate.
But what then?
She was right. That was the utter hell of it. He might have reacted impulsively--saying divorce, for God's sake, what an idiot--but that didn't change the truth.
If he turned around now, she'd take him back (he couldn't imagine that she wouldn't), and they'd slide back into that boring, half-love rut they'd developed.
Here, alone in the car, he could admit that she was right. They both deserved better.
After all these years, she'd taken the decision out of his hands.
He closed his eyes, then slowly opened them. Rain patterned the windshield, thumped hard on the roof of the car.
"I loved you, Birdie," he whispered aloud.
It didn't escape his notice that even when he spoke to himself, in this cheap little car where no one could hear, he used the past tense.
The next day, the movers showed up with the furniture. Elizabeth stumbled out of bed to greet them. As soon as they left, she went back to bed. She stayed there for three days.
And still, she didn't want to get up.
She pulled the quilt up to her chin and lay there. Rain thumped on the roof, tapped on the window, a constant drip-drip-drip.
She understood now why couples broke up and got back together even if the love had turned stale. There was a safety in the known.
The irony was, this was what she'd dreamed of. All those years, as time and responsibility and daily life had slowly--so slowly--eroded her marriage and her personality, she'd dreamed of being On Her Own.
She'd always imagined that as an end in itself. A goal. A pie-in-the-sky dream that would bring with it little bluebirds of happiness.
She knew she'd made the right decision, but still, late at night when the house was dark and rain pummeled the roof, she worried that she would always be alone, that no one would ever kiss her again, or sit with her after dinner and talk about nothing. Worse yet, that no one would look at her slowly aging face and say, "You're beautiful, Birdie," or whisper, "I love you," just before the lights went out.
She flung the quilt aside and sat up.
It was time to start this new life of hers.
(This was a vow she'd made at least twice a day since Jack left.)
This time she meant it.
She swung her legs over the edge of the bed and planted her bare feet on the cold floor. Like the Bride of Frankenstein, she lumbered to a stand.
"I could paint," she said aloud, just as she'd said every other time she'd managed to crawl out of bed, but even as she uttered the words, she felt defeated.
Slowly, her breath leaked out. She hardly made a sound at all as she sank back onto the bed.
If she didn't do something, she'd sink into a pit of depression.
When a woman was in this kind of trouble, there was only one thing to do. Unfortunately, the phone wouldn't be connected until "Sometime between noon and four o'clock."
She reached over to the bedside table for a paper and pen. Before she could talk herself out of it, she started to write.
Dear Meghann:
I'm in trouble. After years of whining, I have finally done something about my unhappiness. Jack and I are separated. It's funny that one little word, only a few syllables, can so profoundly rip the shit out of your life.
And here's the punch line (though it's a joke you've heard before): I'm even more unhappy. I want to kick up my heels and party till the sun goes down, but I can't seem to get my industrial-size ass out of bed.
You were right, it seems, about all of it.
I could use a laugh right about now. (So tell me about your newest boyfriend.)
XXOO
Elizabeth
She immediately felt better.
Reaching out to someone was better than sitting here, wondering what she was going to do with the rest of her life. What would it be like to be a woman alone?
Suddenly she thought about her stepmother, who was also alone.
You take care of Anita, you hear me?
It was the last thing Daddy had asked of her.
She'd made a deathbed promise . . . and then done nothing to keep it.
She reached for another piece of stationery.
Dear Anita:
I am at the beach house by myself.
It's quiet here, so quiet that I am beginning to realize how noisy my life was before. It is the way of women, I think, to follow the loudest voice, to constantly do for others.
I am trying now to find my own lost voice. Perhaps you are, too. An empty house can be a lonely, frightening world for women like us, used to listening to others.
My thoughts often drift southward these days, and I pray that you are okay. If there's anything I can do to help you, please don't be afraid to call. I know we've always been distant with each other, Anita, but in the words of Bob Dylan, "the times they are a changin'." Maybe we can find a new way.