She hated the weakness that made her answer.
“Yes.”
“And the problem is ... ”
Ruby felt like crying. “I like her.” She swallowed thickly. “No.I love her.”
Val was quiet for a moment, then he said, “I'm sorry, Ruby.”
His concern was harder to take than the yelling. “I am, too,” she answered dully.
“You'll be on the plane then, right? I'll have Bertram pick you up.”
Ruby hung up the phone in a daze. She wandered out onto the porch, found the FedEx envelope. Inside, there was a first-class ticket and a short itinerary. They were taking her to Spago to celebrate after the taping of Sarah Purcell ...
A week ago that would have thrilled her.
She walked dully past her mother's door. At the last minute, she stopped, pressed her fingertips to the wood.
“I'm sorry,” Ruby breathed. But she knew those two little words wouldn't be enough. Not nearly enough.
With a sigh, she turned and went upstairs. She flopped onto the bed and tried to sleep, but she couldn't keep her eyes closed. At last, she flicked on the light and reached for her pad of paper.
I just got off the phone with my agent.
The joke is on me, it seems. I can't get out of this deal. I have to deliver the article as promised or some corporate Mr. Big will sue me until I bleed.
And I will lose my mother this woman whom I've waited and longed for all of my life, whom I've alternately fled and vilified. Whatever we could've have become will be gone. And this time it will be all my fault. The whole world will see the bankruptcy of my soul.
I finally learned that life is not made up of big moments and sudden epiphanies, but rather of tiny bits of time, some so small they pass by unnoticed.
All this I can see now ... and it is too late.
Monday, I will appear on The Sarah Purcell Show, and after that, what I see will matter only to me. My mother won't care.
But I want to say this-for the record, although I'm aware it comes too late and at too great a price-I love my mother.
I love my mother.
Ruby released her hold on the pen. It rolled away from her, plopped over the edge of the bed and onto the floor, where it landed with a little click.
It was too much, all of this, and on the day she'd finally believed in a happy-ever-after future for herself. She couldn't write anymore, couldn't think.
“I love you, Mom,” she whispered, staring up at the spidery crack in the ceiling.
Chapter Twenty-four
Nora sat at the kitchen table, reading a fifteen-year-old newspaper that she'd found in the broom closet and sipping a cup of lukewarm coffee. The front-page story was an outraged report that Washington State officials had set off underwater firecrackers to scare away sea lions at the Ballard Locks. The sea lions were eating the salmon and the steelhead. Beside that story was a smaller column-complete with photograph. President Reagan's dog had received a tonsillectomy.
Mostly, she was waiting for Ruby to come downstairs. Nora had tried to wait up for her daughter the previous night, but at about twelve-thirty, she'd given up. It had to be a good sign that Ruby hadn't come home early.
At least, that's what Nora told herself.
She was about to turn the page when the phone rang. Ignoring the crutches leaning against the wall, she hobbled to the counter and answered. “Hello?”
“It's me. Dec.”
Nora sagged against the cold, pebbled surface of the refrigerator. “Hi, Dee. What excellent news do you have for me today?”
“You're not going to like it.”
“That's hardly surprising.”
“I just got off the phone with Tom Adams. He called me at home. On Sunday, to tell me to tell you that if you didn't get those blankety blank columns on his blankety-blank desk by Wednesday morning, he was going to slap a ten million-dollar lawsuit on you. He said the paperwork was already done on it, he was just giving you a last chance.” She made a little coughing sound. “He said he was going to sue everybody you'd ever worked with including me.”
“He can't do that,” Nora said, though, of course, she had no idea whether or not he could.
“Are you sure?” Dee sounded scared.
“I'll talk to Tom myself,” Nora answered, before Dee could really get going.
“Oh, thank God.”
“What else is going on there? Is the brouhaha dying down?”
“No,” and to her credit, Dee sounded miserable about it. "Your housekeeper went on Larry King Live last night and said ... terrible things about you.
“Adele said bad things about me?”
“A woman named Barb Heinneman said you'd commissioned an expensive stained-glass window from her and never paid for it. And your hair lady-Carla-she said you were a lousy tipper.”
“Oh, for God's sake, what does that have-”
“The Tattler reported that guy in the pictures wasn't your first ... affair. They're saying that you and your husband had an ”open“ marriage and you both slept with tons of other people. And sometimes ...” Dee's voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. “You did it in groups. Like in that movie, Eyes Wide Shut. That's what they wrote, anyway.”
Nora's head was spinning. Honest to God, a part of her felt like laughing, it was that ridiculous. Eyes Wide Shut? Group sex? For the first time since this whole mess began, she started to get mad. She'd made mistakes-big ones, bad ones-but this ...
This, she didn't deserve. As she'd heard in a movie once-this shit she wouldn't eat. They were trying to make her out to be some kind of whore. “Is that it? Or am I carrying some space alien's mutant child, too?”
Dee laughed nervously. “That's mostly it. Except ... ”
“Yes?” Nora drew the word out, gave it at least three syllables.