Nora didn't know how to combat that.
Do you want me to be like Caroline? Ruby had asked. Pretend that everything is fine between us?
Nora leaned back in her chair; sighing tiredly. Ruby was right. Ruby, with her fire, her anger; her chipped shoulder ... at least she was honest. All or nothing. Black or white. She couldn't live in the shades of gray that comforted her sister.
“I miss you, Ruby,” she whispered, daring to say the words to this silent world; words she couldn't imagine being able to say to her younger daughter. Sadness welled up inside her. Instead of pushing it away or pretending it didn't exist, she allowed herself to wallow in it. I miss you, baby girl ...
She thought of all the years that had passed her by-Ruby leaving for college ... quitting college ... moving to Los Angeles (had she taken Rand's ratty old Volkswagen or had she found a way to buy a new car? ... renting her first apartment ...
So much time gone.
“Enough,” she said at last. Straightening her spine, she opened her eyes.
What she needed was a plan. She needed to attack the problem with Ruby aggressively-there was no other way to deal with her.
There would be no second chance; she knew that. Nora had one week-six days, now-to crack through the hard shell of the past.
But how?
“Okay,” she counseled herself. “Pretend this is a reader letter.”
Dear Nora:
Years ago, I walked out on my marriage and left my children. My younger daughter has never forgiven me. Now she tells me that she forgotten all memories of me. How do I make amends?
She took a deep breath, thinking it through. If Nora had received a letter like this, she would have taken the woman to task for her unpardonable behavior; would have told her it was no surprise that her daughter hated her.
“Hypocrite,” she hissed. No wonder she'd lost her career.
Anyway, after moralizing for a few sentences, she would have said ...
Force her to remember you.
The answer came easily when offered to a stranger.
Nora smiled. If she forced Ruby to remember the past, they could possibly find their way into the present... maybe even peek at a different future.
It wouldn't be easy, she knew. Or particularly pleasant.
Probably excruciating, in fact.
But it was the only way. Right now, it was easy for Ruby to hate Nora-she only remembered the horrible choices made that summer. Would it be so easy ifRuby remembered the good times?
Behind her; the screen door squeaked open. “Nora?”
Nora wheeled around, smiling brightly. “Hi, honey.”
Ruby frowned. “You're awfully chipper for eight in the morning. Do you want a cup of coffee?”
“No, thanks. I've got some. Why don't you get a cup and join me out here? It's beautiful.”
Ruby ran a hand through her spiky, sleep-molded hair and nodded. Wordlessly, she went back inside, then came out a few minutes later and sat down in the rocker.
Nora stared down at the beach. The silence between them was strangely companionable, not unlike a thousand other mornings, long ago, when they'd sat together out here.
She took a sip of her coffee and glanced out at the point. “Remember the Fourth of July barbecues we used to have out here? Your dad was always gone fishing and the three of us girls would load up on firecrackers.”
Ruby smiled. “Sparklers were my favorite. I couldn't wait for it to get dark.”
“We wrote things in the light, remember?” Nora said, watching Ruby. “I always wrote: I love my girls.”
Ruby curled her hands around her coffee cup, as if she needed a sudden infusion of warmth. “Caroline always scrawled the name of whatever boy she was in love with at the time. Remember when it was Alexander Jorgenson? It took two sparklers to spell his whole name-she was in a panic.”
Nora smiled. She pictured Eric and Dean, standing around the grill, laughing. They'd had impeccable timing, those boys. They never missed a meal. There was a sudden lump in her throat, and so her voice was soft when she said, “You only wrote Dean’s name. Year after year.”
Ruby sighed. ”Yeah ... He and Eric always showed up right when you put the salmon on the barbecue remember?“ She looked up. ”Caroline tells me you've stayed in touch with Eric. How is he?"
Nora had known this moment was coming; she'd thought she was prepared for it, but she wasn't. She released her breath in a slow sigh. There was no way to honor Eric's wish for privacy, not with Nora unable to drive. Sooner or later; she would have to elicit Ruby's help, and when she did, Ruby would learn about Eric. But how did you tell your daughter that one of her best childhood friends was dying?
“Mom?”
Nora casually wiped her eyes and metRuby's expectant gaze. "Eric has cancer.
Ruby paled. “Oh, my God ... ”
Nora watched the memories move through Ruby's eyes. She knew her daughter was thinking back to lazy summer days spent down at the lake with Dean and Eric. It was a long time before Ruby found her voice. “How bad is it?”
“Bad.”
“Is he going to die?”
t hurt to answer. “Yes, honey, he is.”
Ruby slumped forward, burying her head in her hands. “I should have stayed in contact with him. God ...” She fell silent, shaking her head, and Nora knew her daughter was crying. “It seems like yesterday we were all together. I can't imagine him ... sick.”
“I know. I keep thinking about those Fourth of July barbecues. I used to watch you and Dean on the beach. You'd hold hands and duel with your sparklers. I could hear your laughter all the way up here, and when you got older; and started whispering ... then I worried.”
Ruby looked up. Tears spiked her eyelashes, made her look about ten years old. “I never knew that.”
“Motherhood is full of secret worries.” Nora realized a second too late that she'd made herself vulnerable. She should never have used the word secret. But, thankfully, Ruby had bigger things on her mind.
“Can we visit Eric?”
“Of course. He's staying at the old house on Lopez. I know he'd love to see you.” Nora leaned back in her chair and stared out at the Sound. “Sometimes, when I close my eyes, I can picture all of us. You, me, Caroline ... Eric and Dean. What I remember most are days out on the Wind Lass. Dino and Eric loved that boat ... ”
“I know what you're doing,” Ruby said after a long pause; her voice was thick and low. “You want me to remember.”