"Jamie?" Elizabeth said, waiting for the waspish, "Yeah, what?"
She knew what she wanted to say, but not how to say it. With Jamie, a serious conversation was like driving on the Los Angeles freeway. You had to change lanes with extreme caution. "Do you think you want to quit swimming because you're depressed about Grandad?"
It took Jamie a moment to answer, and when she did, her voice was soft, trembling. "I miss him all the time."
"Me, too. I still talk to him, though. It helps a little."
"You live by yourself right now. I'm surrounded by thousands of students--tons of whom are probably psych majors. They'd lock me up if I went around talking to my dead grandfather."
"You've never cared what other people think. Don't start now. But if you're embarrassed, talk to him at home. Stephie won't laugh."
"Stephie who?" she said bitterly.
So, that was part of the problem, too. Stephanie was busy getting ready to graduate; Jamie hated to admit that she'd miss her big sister. "She's too busy to spend much time with you, I take it?"
"Tim the wonder boy practically lives here. And he brings her flowers when she aces a test. Flowers. Hell, she's aced every test since they asked her to recite the alphabet in kindergarten. Our apartment looks like the flower store in Little Shop of Horrors. It makes me sick."
"You mean jealous," Elizabeth said gently.
A pause. "Yeah. Now they want me to tag after them on spring break. Barbie, Ken . . . and Skipper. Yee-ha. The only thing worse would be to stay in the apartment by myself and watch her stupid flowers die."
"Why don't you come home, hang with me?" Elizabeth said automatically. Then she realized what she'd done.
I'm getting the house ready for renters. Could she say it out loud, face to face?
"Home? And where's that, with you or Dad? And speaking of that, when are you moving to New York? Dad sounded lonely the last time I called him."
These were dangerous waters, especially with Jamie swimming alongside. "As soon as we find suitable renters."
"Who are you waiting for, the British Royal Family? Just rent the sucker to some poor schmuck who likes mushrooms that grow overnight and rain that hits you in the head like a hammerblow."
"You don't like it here?"
Jamie laughed. "Actually, I do. But it's just a house; we've lived in tons of them."
Elizabeth sighed. That was one of the by-products of her life with Jack. They hadn't given their children a sense of roots, of home. "You're right," she answered.
"So, what would we do? If I remember, March is a particularly sucky month. We probably wouldn't see the sun once."
Elizabeth couldn't help smiling at that. "We could rent movies and play board games."
" 'Be still, my heart.' Board games with my mother over spring break." She laughed. "I'll think about it, Mom. Truly. But I gotta run now. Michael is picking me up in an hour."
"Is your sister home?"
"Sorry. This is her day for curing Alzheimer's. I'll have her call you tomorrow. Love you."
"Love you, too. Bye."
After Elizabeth hung up, she stared down at the phone. Her first thought was: Call Jack.
He needed to know what was going on with Jamie. A heads up would make the I-want-to-quit-swimming conversation run a lot smoother.
Elizabeth had always greased the wheels of Jack's relationship with his daughters. He . . . missed things sometimes, overlooked the important moments. It had been her job--or one she'd taken on, at least--to facilitate a good father-daughter bond.
Without her guidance, she was afraid he'd inadvertently hurt his daughter's feelings.
She dialed his number.
Jack was in a meeting with Sally. "He actually threw a punch after the match was over--and broke the guy's jaw?"
She nodded. "Every second was caught on tape. The question is this: Is it assault and battery because the match had ended? Or does assumption of the risk cover everything that happens in the ring?"
"That's always been a question with far-reaching implications. Late hits in football, and forget about hockey. With this new interest in--"
The phone rang. He waited for his secretary to answer, then remembered that she'd gone to lunch. "Just a second." He picked up the phone and answered, "Jackson Shore."
"I almost hung up." Elizabeth's laughter sounded forced, nervous.
"Hey, Birdie," he said after a stunned pause.
Sally's smile faded. She glanced at the door.
"Am I catching you at a bad time?" Elizabeth asked.
Her voice sounded different, uncertain, though it didn't surprise him. In a few short weeks, they'd become strangers. He wouldn't have thought it possible, after twenty-four years of living together, but it was true.
The silence between them stretched out, grew uncomfortable. It was all so unexpected; she'd always been his compass, his true north; or so he'd thought. He'd imagined that without her, he'd be lost. But that hadn't happened. Quite the opposite, in fact. He was now afraid that he'd be lost with her.
"Jack?"
"I'm here." He didn't know exactly what she expected him to say. Worse, he didn't know what he wanted to say. Maybe nothing at all. He was afraid suddenly that she'd called to reconcile; now he was the one who wanted time.
Sally stood up. "I'll leave you alone for a minute," she whispered.
He nodded, mouthed, "Thanks."
"Who's that?" Birdie asked.
He felt guilty suddenly, though there was no need. He and Sally hadn't done anything unprofessional. "It's just my assistant. We were in a meeting."
"Maybe I should call back . . ."
He wanted to say, Yes, do that, and then avoid her future call. But such a maneuver would be pointless. With a heavy sigh and a heavier heart, he watched Sally leave the room, then said, "So, Birdie, what's going on?"