Five Days (42 page)

Read Five Days Online

Authors: Douglas Kennedy

BOOK: Five Days
12.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Which makes this all way cooler. My only question now to you is, why didn't we live this way when we were a family? Why didn't you do this for us?'

Did I feel a stab of guilt? Initially yes. But then another thought came to me; a thought which was, for me anyway, an articulation of a certain truth.

‘Because I didn't realize we could live this way. Because I spent years stymieing my imagination, my horizons. I don't blame your father for that. It was me, myself and I who kept myself so hemmed in. And I feel bad about that.'

‘Well, it's not like I'm going to blame you for the rest of my life. But when I finally get my own place I am going to demand payback . . . and get you to help me design it.'

The next morning we drove up to Farmington to collect Ben. He had just one duffel bag of clothes and one case full of art supplies for his year in Berlin. En route to Boston he announced that he wanted to stop by Norm's Art Supplies to pick up a half-litre of Tetron Azure Blue to pack along for Berlin.

‘You mean,' Sally asked, ‘you don't think they sell paints at that way-too-cool Berlin art school you're heading to?'

‘I'm sure I can easily get an azure blue over there, but not Norm's. So indulge me here.'

‘What do you think I've spent my life doing?' Sally asked.

‘So speaks the refugee from cheerleading.'

‘By the time you get back next summer I'll be a Goth with a shaved head and a biker boyfriend.'

‘Is that a promise?' Ben asked.

Traffic into Boston was terrible. We only had a few minutes to spare by the time we reached Norm's. Ben had phoned ahead – and when he explained he was leaving for Berlin that night, Norm broke a rule and agreed to have the paint mixed and ready to go before getting paid for it.

I found parking outside his shop.

‘You've got to see this place,' I told Sally, and we ducked inside.

‘So I get to meet the whole family,' Norm said.

‘Just about,' Ben said, and there was an awkward moment thereafter which Norman cleverly broke.

‘Now I have to say that I am flattered to be having my own Tetron Azure Blue accompanying you to Berlin. And if you need a refill while there . . .?'

‘I can always pay for it,' I said.

‘You don't have to do that,' Ben said.

‘Here's my email address,' I said, writing it down for Norm.

‘And here's my card,' he said, all smiles. ‘Drop in any time you're next in Boston.'

I smiled tightly.

Once back in the car, Ben noted:

‘My mother has an admirer.'

To which Sally added:

‘And even though the shop's a little too deliberately weird and I'd get rid of that goatee if I was him, he's kind of cool.'

‘I'm not in the market,' I said.

‘You will be,' Sally said.

‘Oh, please,' I said.

‘All right, live the life of a nun then,' Sally said. ‘All pure and sad.'

‘Haven't you noticed,' Ben said, ‘Mom doesn't do sad much anymore.'

But an hour later I was very much alone. We got Ben to Logan just seventy minutes before his flight. As rushed as it was to get him checked in and over to the security checkpoint, one good thing about the lack of time was the fact that it made saying goodbye less tortured (for me anyway). Ben hugged his sister. He hugged me and promised to email as soon as he was settled in and online tomorrow. Seeing the tears in my eyes he hugged me again and said:

‘I guess you could say this is a rite of passage for us all.'

Then he headed off, turning back once after he cleared the boarding-pass check to give us a fast wave. A moment later he headed into the security maze. Other passengers crowded in behind him. And I had to cope with the realization that I would not be seeing my son until Easter of next year.

Sally had prearranged to meet a group of friends that night in Boston. I'd offered to drop her off at the café on Newbury Street where she was due to hook up with them, but was relieved when she insisted on taking public transport into the city. Newbury Street still had too many shadows for me.

‘You going to be OK?' she asked as we parted in front of the international terminal.

‘I'll be fine,' I said. ‘And anytime you want to escape Orono for the bright lights of Portland . . .'

‘You'll be seeing me often, Mom. Especially because of your cool apartment.'

Then, with a final hug, she jumped the bus to the nearby T-station. She waved again as the vehicle headed out into the early-evening traffic. Then she too was gone.

A few hours later I walked back into my apartment. All the way north I was dreading the moment when I first stepped inside, shutting the door behind me, thinking:
I am very much by myself.
Though I had no desire whatsoever to be back in the place once called ‘our house', returning to this empty apartment tonight was more than a little hard. Ben was correct: this was another rite of passage. And life is, verily, like this. The ties that bind are inevitably picked apart – by biology, by change, by disaffection, by the inexorable forward momentum within which we all travel. With the result that, at some juncture, you do come home to an empty home. And its silence is as huge as it is chilling.

* * *

The next morning I awoke late (by which I mean nine a.m.) to a text from Ben:

I'm here. Jet-lagged and weirded out. Sharing a room with a crazy sculptor from Sarajevo. Hey, it's not Kansas, Toto. Love – Ben

There was also, surprisingly, an email from the famous Norm of Norm's Art Supplies; a rather witty missive in which he hoped I wouldn't consider him a stalker for dispatching this communiqué to me, and that he isn't in the habit of hitting on customers (let alone mothers of customers), but he was wondering out loud now if we might be able to meet up for dinner the next time I found myself in Boston. Or I could meet him somewhere between Portland and Boston like Portsmouth (‘
the only non-fascist town in New Hampshire
'). He went on to explain that he was divorced with a sixteen-year-old daughter named Iris, and ‘
an ex-wife who married a mutual funds guy as a way of refuting all those bohemian years with yours truly
', and that he wasn't going to tell me that his favorite color was black, his favorite Beatle was John, the person in history he identified with wasn't Jackson Pollock (‘
I don't drive drunk
'), and this was the offer of a dinner, no more. ‘
Or maybe movie and a dinner, if there's something interesting playing at the Brattle Street . . . the last great revival house holdout.
'

I smiled a bit while reading the email. He did have a nice, self-deprecating comic touch. But the mention of the Brattle Street Cinema was like the mention of Newbury Street yesterday: a remembrance which triggered a flash of sadness that, though dissipated, still had, all these months later, the ability to unsettle me; to remind me that, as much as I felt myself ever freer from the bonds of despair, the grief could still reassert itself out of nowhere.

There was only one solution to such an unsettling moment: a run. I squinted out my window at the day outside. Overcast, dark, but the impending rain had yet to fall. Five minutes later I was in my running clothes and shoes, pounding the pavement, each stride an attempt to distance myself further from the heartache that, like a stubborn stain, simply would not wash clean.

When I returned home from my five-mile cascade I sent a brief note to Norm:

I'm flattered . . . but am not in a place to even entertain the idea of a nice dinner with a clearly nice and interesting man. When and if that changes, I'll send you an email . . . though, by that time, some smart woman will have snapped you up.

Was I flirting with him? Of course. But I also knew that, for the foreseeable, all I could do was keep running.

* * *

I was running when I saw him. Running down a corridor of the radiography unit, having just X-rayed a fifty-nine-year-old construction worker whose left leg had been trapped under a falling steel beam (it was a mess). I had an ultrasound to do on a young mother (seventeen years old) with a suspected ectopic pregnancy. That was three minutes from now. Life in our unit is very much a time-and-motion study, an endless attempt to keep to the very tight schedule we work under, punctuated by emergency cases like the poor man who'd just arrived with a limb that had been virtually pulverized. But three minutes meant time for a much-needed coffee, though not enough time to run back to the staff room and use the very decent Nespresso machine that the six of us in radiography all chipped in $35 each to buy. So I stopped at the vending machine in the hallway that runs between the X-ray, ultrasound, and scanning suites. The public waiting room is also just off this corridor, which means you often run into patients and their families in front of the vending machines. Given how little time I had – and how slow that coffee machine was – I sighed an inward groan when I saw a man putting money in its slot. From a distance I could see he was in his fifties, gray-haired, old-style glasses, a zip-up golf jacket in a mid-blue fabric. Hearing my hurried footsteps he looked up. And that's when I caught sight of Richard Copeland.

He blanched at first sight of me. Looking beyond shocked. Mortified. I too was stopped in my tracks. I immediately took in just how much he had returned to looking like the man I first met that Friday at the hotel check-in. Only now the chatty charm he had displayed from the outset had been replaced by an aura of world-weariness, of resignation. As befits a man who had lost so much. Most especially his son. He met my stunned gaze for a moment, then turned away.

‘Hello, Richard,' I said.

He said nothing.

‘What brings you to my corner of the world?' I asked.

‘My wife. She needs a scan. Some spinal thing. Nothing life threatening. More a curvature thing. They had a space here before Midcoast in Brunswick. So . . .'

I glanced down at the chart I held in my hand. A chart listing my next five appointments before lunch break. Muriel Copeland was not listed there. Sometimes there is a God.

Richard saw me check my chart.

‘Don't worry,' he said, ‘she's having the scan done now.'

‘I hope she'll be OK. How are you?'

He gave me the most cursory of shrugs, then looked up at me again, taking me in this time.

‘You look wonderful,' he finally said.

‘Thank you,' I said. ‘I was so horrified and saddened to hear about Billy.'

He bit down on his lower lip and bent his head again. Then, in a near whisper:

‘Thank you.'

‘I don't know how you cope with such a terrible—'

‘I don't talk about that anymore.'

His tone was abrupt, like a door slammed shut.

‘Sorry,' I said.

‘I heard you're no longer living in Damariscotta.'

‘And where did you hear that?'

‘It's a small state.'

Silence. Then he said:

‘I made a mistake. A big mistake.'

‘So it goes.'

‘I think about it all the time.'

‘So do I.'

Silence.

His coffee finished dispensing. He let the cup sit there.

‘So you live in Portland now?' he asked.

‘That's right.'

‘Are you happy?'

‘Happier.'

Silence. I checked my watch. I said:

‘My next patient awaits me. So . . .'

‘I've never stopped—'

I held up my hand.

‘That's the past tense.'

Silence. He hung his head.

‘I wish you well, Richard.'

And I walked away.

I ran when I got home that night. I ran the next morning. I ran and ran and ran. Six days a week, five miles a day. Rarely heading out in the evening – unless the old distress was creeping in. Always up before dawn. Always heading across Casco Bay, careening my way through assorted neighborhoods, encircling the Portland lighthouse, saluting that septuagenarian fellow jogger with a quick wave, then pushing my way towards home.

Home.

The realtor called me last week, informing me the owners of the apartment – a retired couple who now live most of the time in Florida – needed to sell the place. And they needed a fast sale. As in, they would be willing to accept $190,000 if I was willing to close on the sale within two months.

‘Let me think about that,' I said.

I called Lucy. She called a man named Russell Drake in Brunswick who organized mortgages. Money was cheap right now, he explained. Around $75 a month repayment per $1,000 borrowed. So if I was to borrow $150,000 dollars for a period of twenty-five years, I'd be paying $1,350 dollars a month . . . just a bit more than what I was paying right now for rent. And yes, the sum borrowed would be the equivalent of two and a half years of my salary at the hospital, so several banks would be most pleased to offer me a mortgage. ‘You'll probably have a bunch of suitors – which means we can negotiate the finer points to your advantage. And yes, I think a two-month closing is perfectly doable. So shall we meet within the next day or so and get the ball rolling?'

I called the realtor back and said:

‘One sixty-five is what I can pay. If the sellers accept that, we can close within the time frame they want.'

The offer was accepted the next morning.

Home.

The apartment no longer would be someone else's property in which I was loitering for a spell. It would be mine – and a place for Ben and Sally to return to in the years to come before it became theirs. The place you ‘return to' inevitably becomes the place you ‘come into'. As my father used to say, the farce of life is grounded in one terrible truth: we are all just passing through.

* * *

Home.

On the morning that I was to sign my divorce agreement I did my post-dawn run, then came home and showered and changed into a suit – the one suit I own. The black suit I wore at my father's funeral. The suit I should have augmented with another suit by now. But since I never wear suits . . .

Other books

Meteorite Strike by A. G. Taylor
Animal Instincts by Gena Showalter
Swimming with Cobras by Smith, Rosemary
Nocturne by Charles Sheehan-Miles
Machina Viva by Nathaniel Hicklin
The Bollywood Bride by Sonali Dev
Winning Dawn by Thayer King