His First Wife (9 page)

Read His First Wife Online

Authors: Grace Octavia

BOOK: His First Wife
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“Excuse me, ladies,” I said as this rant went on. “On that note, I need a sip of water.” I backed away and headed toward the standing bartender Marcy had positioned temporarily in the dining room.
“Sex?!” I heard someone say as I walked away. “Who's having sex with them? I leave that to someone else.”
The day was beginning to wear me down and I was feeling ready to head upstairs to get some sleep. The baby felt heavy in my stomach. He'd gone to sleep and while the night was young, he was taking me down with him.
After chatting with a few of Jamison's friends, I found myself sipping on a glass of water in the corner of the room. With no one to talk to, I was thinking about Jamison and feeling sad again.
Piper appeared from out of nowhere. It was as if she sensed my tiredness and crept up beside me with ninja-like silence to catch me in a vulnerable state. If I ever forgot why I hated these women, Piper was always there to remind me.
“Drink too much water and your water will break,” Piper said another one of her corny jokes.
“Funny,” I pretended to laugh like most people.
“My mother used to say that to me.”
“Well, mine had a different philosophy,” I said, imagining what my mother would be sipping on at the moment.
“You know, I wished I was invited to your shower,” she ambushed me. Piper was not one of my friends and there was no reason in the world for her to have been invited to the shower.
“Well, it was a small gathering,” I responded.
“Yeah, but sometimes I just wish we were closer.” She sighed and it was almost sincere. “Like if you'd pledged or something, we might be best friends. We have a lot more in common than you and Marcy. . . . Same family, same history.... We could have been close.” She paused, expecting me to respond, I supposed.
“Sure,” I said.
“Oh, it just makes me so sad that I couldn't be there for you right now . . . with Jamison,” she finally said.
“Be there? Jamison?”
“Yeah, like through all of this . . . that I couldn't be your friend and comfort you.”
“All of this?” I assumed she was talking about the baby, but the tone in her voice . . . Maybe it was the alcohol I smelled on her breath talking.
“Jamison . . . and why he's not here.”
“Why he's not here? And why isn't he here?” My heart skipped a beat.
“I know about the other woman,” Piper whispered, gritting her teeth.
“Really,” I said to stop myself from saying a long list of other things. I didn't want to give Piper that satisfaction. She was no shoulder to lean on. She was just as fake as the filler she'd had pumped into her lips. I began to block Piper out and searched the room for the source of this drama beside me. Marcy was the only person who could have told her.
“No problem, Kerry,” I heard Piper say. “You know I have your back. I always will . . .”
I felt the fire raging in my stomach. I held tight to my glass to stop my fist from meeting Piper's jaw.
“You're a troll,” I heard myself say.
“Excuse me?” Piper placed her hand over her heart.
“You heard me,” I said rather loud. The people standing closest to us turned around. “What gives you the right to come over here and say something like that to me? Who do you think you are?”
“Kerry!”
“No, not Kerry to you. And if you really want to know why I didn't join your sorority, it was because of simple women like you that I have no desire to associate myself with. In fact, that sorority would be better off without women like you. The world would be better off without you.” I threw what was left in my glass in her face. “Now that's water under the bridge.” I slammed the glass on a table. “My mother used to say that to me.”
I walked away as the crowd around us grew. Piper stood there gasping as if I'd had a full gallon of water in that little glass.
“What did you do?” Marcy asked, pulling me into the kitchen.
“Don't you dare touch me,” I said.
“What?”
“You told her? I can't believe you did that! I just can't believe you're up to your old stuff, Marcy.”
“I didn't.”
“Don't lie. Because I already know. There's no way out of this one.” I was fuming.
“I didn't tell her.”
“Why did you do it? Needed something to chat about on the phone?”
“I wouldn't do that. I just wanted to protect—”
“You know what? Don't say anything else.” I cut her off. “I don't want to hear it. You did the same stuff in college and I've had enough. Just stay away from me.” I turned and headed up the staircase in the kitchen. It was time for me to go.
“Kerry,” she called after me, but it was too late. This was a deep cut and I was in no condition to pretend to patch it up.
After five minutes of fussing with the dress and realizing that it was going to take me much longer to get out of it than I needed to make a quick departure, I just grabbed my purse and headed for the staircase. I needed to get out of that house and away from Marcy before I broke down and cursed everyone out. How could she betray me like that? After all of these years and all of these promises she made never to share my business? She was supposed to be there for me. Especially at a time like this. Not out spreading my business.
Struggling down the hallway, I stopped at Milicent's door to say good night. I didn't want her to have to suffer for her mother's shortcomings. She was my godchild and I would always love her.
I swung my purse over my shoulder and opened her bedroom door. And there, sitting in front of a mirror, was a Millicent with about a pound of caked-on white foundation on her face. Iris was beside her, applying red lipstick. Milicent looked like she was in whiteface. “Now we look just alike,” Iris said. Milicent saw me in the mirror and turned around quickly.
“Aunt Kerry, we're just playing,” she said, clearly knowing she was doing something wrong.
“Take it off,” I said with a sense of urgency in my voice that was familiar. Painful. “Now!” I snarled, causing both Milicent and Iris to jump.
“Kerry,” I heard Damien say from the other side of the door. Milicent looked at me with a fear in her eyes that begged me not to say anything.
I hurried and stepped out of the room, closing the door behind me, just as Damien got close.
“Everything okay?” he said, looking at the door.
“Yeah, they're watching television. I just . . . wanted to say good night and . . .”
“Yeah, Marcy just told me what happened. I wanted to come and see if you were okay.”
“Oh, don't worry about me,” I managed.
“I'm really sorry about all of this. I spoke to Jamison and he feels real bad—”
“I don't want to hear that right now.” I stepped away from the door.
“Come on, don't—”
“I'm angry. I'm real angry right now and I just want to be alone.”
“Jamison's not going to leave you. He's not that kind of man. He's—”
“Like you?”
“You know what I mean, Kerry,” he said.
“Did you know about her?” I asked.
“Let's not go there.”
“You did?” I eyed him hard. “You knew about this?! You were in my house. With my family. And you lied to me?!”
“It's not about that . . .”
“If cheating isn't about lies then what is it about?” I said. I felt my heart break again. This time for my friendships. “Give me my keys so I can go home.” I put out my hand.
“I don't think you should do that. Not in your condition. You're eight months—”
“Fuck my condition,” I yelled. “Give me the Goddamned keys.”
Together Forever
R
omance is the easiest thing to do when you're in love. Flowers. Chocolate. Poems. Candles. Dinner. These all seemed like silly tokens of affection to me—until I fell in love for the first time. Now I'd liked men before. There was this one boy, Christian Nelson, I had a huge crush on when I was eleven. He was one of my mother's friend's children, and whenever they came to visit, I was all googly-eyed over him. I'd sit for hours, looking into his eyes and saying stupid stuff, but that childhood crush in no way prepared me for what I'd feel inside once I truly fell in love with someone.
After that first night with Jamison, all I could think of was flowers and chocolate, poems, candles, and dinner. He was the air I breathed, the wind beneath my wings, and any other cliché ever concocted. What was so great about our love back then was that I could depend on Jamison. He was always there, always willing to hold me and show me that no matter what other people thought or said, our world was ours, and there, we had love.
For this reason, when I began planning a romantic dinner for his twenty-first birthday, I wanted everything to be perfect. My strong, handsome “Ken” had finally arrived and I wanted to show Jamison how much I appreciated and adored him. Plus, it was just a few weeks until graduation and a long list of questions lingered in the air about our relationship. We already knew that he was headed to school in New York; the question was where I was going to go and how were we going to handle the separation.
If it was to be the first and last birthday I spent with Jamison, my first love, I wanted it to be amazing. From the French dinner I'd ordered, to the Tiffany cuff links I bought to go with his first French-cuff shirt, I wanted to show him the world we'd find together. The success we'd both share as we grew. No more macaroni and cheese in the microwave or business shirts passed down from his mentors; Jamison was on his way to the top.
Of course, the matter of my lacking a real plan after graduation was haunting my subconscious, but I wanted so badly to put that on hold for my Jamison. I wanted to be happy and really feel the love in the moment.
Well, the moment just happened to include the last letter of rejection that came from the last med school I'd applied to arriving in the mail. Something told me not to check the box, but against my better judgment, I did, and the slender envelope told the story Yale wanted to tell before I even opened the letter. I'd sunk a million stories into sadness by the time I heard Jamison parking his car outside of my apartment. I'd managed to hold back tears—for fear it would ruin my makeup—but my spirit was shattered, and while I was in love, my heart was breaking fast.
When Jamison knocked on the door . . . the slow four-point knock he claimed was our little secret . . . I jumped up and reminded myself of the reason for the night. The candles were lit, the dinner was warm, and the reason for the evening was there. I didn't need to talk about my letter. I had to focus on my man. I'd have to suck it all up . . . for the moment.
“Ker Bear,” Jamison said when I opened the door. He stepped inside and with eyes full of an innocent love that I'd later realize was priceless and temporary, he pulled me to his chest and nestled my head beneath his chin. We must have stood there in the foyer for ten minutes, just hugging each other in silence. I could feel his breathing beneath the thin polo shirt he was wearing. It was slow and calm, sweet and longing. He was all into me, around me, and holding me as if it was the first and last time ever. We'd done this before and would again many times after, but this time it was especially sweet. Standing there barefoot and defenseless in his arms, I felt as if anything was possible. I felt safe and loved and desired. And while he had no clue what I'd been going through mentally since I'd checked the mail that morning, it didn't matter. What he was showing me at that moment was that it didn't make a difference where I was going. He'd be there. He'd hold me. And that was enough to help me hold back any tears and put my fears to the side.
“What you got for big daddy?” he finally said, stepping back and kissing me on the forehead.
“You're so crazy,” I said. “It's just dinner. For your birthday.”
“It don't look like dinner! It looks like heaven.” He walked into the living room that I'd decorated with roses and gardenia-scented, white pillar candles. After I forced Marcy to help me pick up twenty-one dozen golden roses and place them around the living room, I sent her to Damien's house for the evening. We were alone and there would be no interruptions. I wanted to play my favorite Enya CD, but Jamison said her howling sounded like a dying wolf, so I settled for his favorite, Sade. As I'd planned, when he walked in the door, “Your Love Is King” was playing.
“It is heaven,” I replied sweetly. “Because you're here.”
“Damn, girl.... You're about to propose to a brother tonight?” he joked. “I don't know . . . I mean, I'm not ready for all that. I have so much to see in the world and I—”
“Stop playing, Jamison.” I was pouting, but I couldn't stop laughing. “I'm serious. This is supposed to be a romantic evening to celebrate your birthday.” Since we'd started dating, I realized that Jamison wasn't exactly romantic. He was silly and playful and whenever I tried to make him be serious, he'd tell a joke and make me laugh. It made me upset because that just wasn't how I'd envisioned my romantic evenings—laughing until my gut hurt—but it also made me happy because it was why I was in love with Jamison in the first place. He could make me smile once more when my cheeks were already hurting, and on my worst days his playful nature made me forget that the word “sadness” even existed. His imitations of my mother even managed to make her seem funny.
“Okay, Ker Bear wants me to be serious?” Jamison blinked and pretended he was becoming some kind of character by wiping his hand over his face. “I am now Jamison the serious man,” he said like a robot.
“See, you want me to laugh,” I said . . . laughing, of course. “But I won't.” I struggled to hold it in, but when he started doing the robot, it was too much to hold back.
Jamison was dancing in the middle of my romantic evening and Paris for his birthday was ruined. But I was laughing. In fact, I was laughing so hard I started coughing and had to bend over to catch my breath. Jamison began patting my back and when I stood up, he hugged me from behind.
“Tyrian purple,” he whispered in my ear.
“What?” I asked, shaking off the last bit of my laughter.
“Tyrian purple,” he said again. “That's what you are.”
“Tyrian?” I turned to face him.
“When I was seven years old, my science teacher, who'd been trying to teach us about the five senses, brought in this cloth his grandfather passed down to him. The day before, he claimed that the cloth was royal—that its color was one of the finest in the world, a scientific wonder that could confuse the senses and make you not only see but also feel color,” Jamison said. “And I was so hard back then, so hardened by the street and stuff going on in my life that I could not care less about what he was talking about. Some old cloth some crotchety white man who probably hated little black boys like me passed down to my lame science teacher??? Who cared? I'd seen color. Nobody could feel color. It was stupid. I hardly made it to school that day. And, as usual, when I got to science, I sat in the last row, in the last seat. I was falling asleep when he finally got to the cloth, but I remember it like yesterday.” Jamison's eyes glimmered as if in his mind he was going back to this moment in his memory. “And when he took it out and held it up, I swear, Kerry, it was the most beautiful thing I'd ever seen. I was still in the backseat in the last row, but my eyes, my mind were up front, you know? And while I'd seen murder and drugs and all this other stuff, the cloth, that color, made me so soft I might as well have been born again that day.” Jamison's eyes went watery and he sank deeper into his memory. “‘Tyrian purple,' my teacher said. ‘This is Tyrian purple . . . the color of royalty. The rarest color of all.'” Jamison paused again and came back to the moment, looking in my eyes. “Ever since that day, I've been trying to find something else in the world that was Tyrian purple. I've seen shades of it. Sometimes paint that has come close, but nothing quite as special. But when I saw you at the Valentine's dance, when I first looked into your eyes—how happy and sad and excited and scared and nervous and bold you looked—the first thing I thought was, ‘Tyrian purple. ' ”
I was about to say something, but Jamison placed a single finger over my lips.
“I didn't see the color, I felt it inside. I felt what my old teacher was talking about. I felt color and I wasn't even looking at it. Tyrian purple. The color that can make you feel. You're my Tyrian purple.”
Jamison and I ended up eating our French meal in bed the next morning. The candles had all melted, the roses had began to droop, his gift was a day late, and nothing about my evening had gone as planned, but I was Tyrian purple and everything was all right by me.
E-MAIL TRANSMISSION
TO: [email protected]
FROM: [email protected]
DATE: 4/25/07
TIME: 2:16
AM
 
I just walked in the house from our fifth time hanging out and I couldn't go to bed without writing you. I know I've been drinking a lot (I'm never doing shots with you again!) but I figure maybe that's a good thing because the alcohol will loosen me up and let me put everything I'm feeling on the page.
 
Jamison, the past month that I've been trying to get to know you has been amazing. You are the best man I've ever known and while I loved Duane with all my heart, he in no way compared to you. It's just the little things you do for me that I really love.... Getting me all those scholarship books for college and talking to your friend at Georgia Perimeter to see if I can sit in on one of his classes to see what it's like. Those are the signs of a good man that isn't afraid to help people. I love that spirit in you. That you don't look down on me because I don't have what you have and are willing to help lift me up. What a man!
 
Every time I see you, I just smile because I think of how lucky I am to know someone like you. Even though it's just a month, I feel like I've known you forever. And I look forward to the future. I know that sounds crazy, because we're friends, but it's how I feel. And sometimes I know I'm not the only one.
 
I see how you look at me too and I can't lie and say it doesn't feel good. I haven't been to bed with another man since Duane and I'm about to burst! So, when you placed your hand on my shoulder when we walked into the movie tonight, I wanted so badly to turn around and just tongue you down right there in front of everyone. I didn't care. I wanted to feel your lips against mine. Feel your heat. Let you know how soft my tongue is and how it might feel against your body. Am I the only one thinking this? I know I'm not crazy!!! I'm not trying to make you do anything, but I know how I feel and I'm old enough to know what I want. I also know what you need and what you're not getting at home. I don't see why two friends can't help each other out.
 
I can't even believe I just wrote that, but fuck it. It's how I feel. And I'm tired of hiding it and pretending it's not. Alcohol or no alcohol, it's what's inside and I'm going to hit send before I lose my nerve…………….
E-MAIL TRANSMISSION
TO: [email protected]
FROM: [email protected]
DATE: 4/27/07
TIME: 1:15
PM
 
First, I have to apologize for taking so long to write you back and not returning your calls over the last two days. I have read your e-mail many times and I wanted to wait a second before I responded.
 
You're not the only one feeling what you're feeling. I like you too and I'm attracted to you. You're a beautiful woman. Believe me I have been wrestling with both of these feelings and while I first thought the answer was to stop being around you, the truth is that I can't. You make me feel good. I look forward to seeing you and how you look at me with those pretty eyes and something inside of me won't let me stop. I'm not sure what it is yet, but I'm man enough to admit that it's there. When you came into my life it was by chance and then it seems like everything I feel, think, and say is changing.
 
I've never questioned anything about my life before, but now I am and I realize that I've been holding a few things back. I used to just make decisions I thought were right and noble and then I stood by that. But right now, I am not sure what's right and noble. I just know what I'm feeling. But all that is beside the point. I guess the real question is, what are we going do?

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