Eric decided to wait until he'd had a week or so to deal with Joe's and Maggie's deaths and to take care of calling the people on Joe's list before he would drive up to Sacramento to tell Jason and Susie. Although he would have liked to wait to tell Julia, too, it just wasn't possible.
The next morning, while Josi sat on his manuscript and stared at him, he tried to reach Julia, first at her house and then at work. Her housekeeper told him she'd left an hour before he called, her assistant told him she wouldn't be in for a couple of days.
He tried working but couldn't concentrate and gave up to go into the kitchen for his fifth cup of coffee that morning. He wound up back at the computer, staring at a blank screen. Josi moved from his desk to the front door, where she stood on her back legs and tapped the handle with her paw.
“You're supposed to be an inside cat,” Eric said.
She looked at him and meowed.
He still hadn't decided what to do with her. He'd never owned a cat, not even as a kid, and had no idea what they required beyond food and water and a litter box. The ideal solution would be to give her to the kids, but Shelly had asthma and was allergic to damn near everything on four legs.
Again Josi meowed, this time putting both paws around the handle.
Eric got up and opened the door a crack to see what she would do. She stuck her nose into the opening, and before he knew what was happening, she'd forced her head and then the rest of her body through.
“Josiâcome back,” he shouted as she took off. He threw open the door to go after her. It didn't seem possible a cat so big could run so fast, but she was out of sight before he made it out onto the porch.
He found her pressed against the corner of Joe and Maggie's front door as if she could gain entry by squeezing through the crack. When he tried to pick her up, she hissed and then let out a low, plaintive howl.
Eric took the key out of his pocket and let her inside.
She raced to the back of the house, going from room to room, her calls becoming increasingly more frantic.
“They're not here,” Eric said after she'd come back into the living room, an accusing look in her eyes. “I know I'm not much, but from now on, I'm all you've got.” Not until that moment was he aware that he'd made up his mind what he was going to do with her. Despite a truckload of doubts, he would keep her himself.
He heard a car pull into the driveway and looked at his watch. The shelter he'd called about taking the boxes of clothes and food said they wouldn't be able to pick them up until sometime after noon. He went to the window. His stomach did a slow roll when he saw Julia getting out of her car.
He met her at the door. “What are you doing here?” he asked.
She took a step backward, surprised at finding him there. “The police called me.”
“God, I'm so sorry you had to find out that way. I was going to come up and tell you in person, but there were some things I had to take care of first.”
“Then it's true . . . ?” She looked past him into the house. “They're dead?” Her voice dropped to a whisper. “Both of them?”
She seemed to fold into herself, the shoulders of her Armani suit growing larger as she slowly disappeared inside. “I hoped it was a mistake. I prayed it was.”
Thinking she was about to collapse, he brought her into his arms. She held on to him as if she were in free fall and he had the only parachute. Eerily silent sobs shook her thin body.
Eric took her inside. They sat together on the sofa while he continued to cradle her. As the sobs lessened, she started to move away, but he held on, gently letting her know it was all right to stay. As if his action had granted her whatever mental permission she needed, she relaxed in his arms.
He handed her tissues from the box on the end table. She wiped her eyes and blew her nose and finally asked, “Do you know why they did it?”
“My guess is that Joe couldn't imagine a life without Maggie.”
“I don't understand. What made him thinkâ”
“She had cancer. Pretty far advanced, from what I could tell. It was only a matter of time, and I think she wanted the time to be one she chose herself.”
“She never even hinted there was something wrong when I saw her in March.”
“I'm convinced she didn't know that Joe planned to go with her.” Absently he ran his hand along her arm. The soft wool yielded to his touch like fine silk. “What I can't figure out is why she chose here.” Eric had struggled with the question since finding them. It was obvious Joe and Maggie cared deeply about Julia. How could they have added to her grief over Ken's death by dying in her house?
She spread a tissue in her lap and methodically began to fold it over and over again until all that was left was a small square. “She probably didn't have anywhere else to go. And I'm sure she knew I would understand.” Her hand closed around the tissue. “She thought Joe would be living in their house after she was gone, and she didn't want him to have to remember her dying there.”
Eric had witnessed this type of thing between women all his life, and still it never failed to amaze him. He didn't doubt for a moment that Julia was right. What she said made perfect sense. So much sense that it was as if Maggie herself had told Julia, as if she'd left behind an invisible capsule with her thoughts and feelings for her friend to discover.
“I know they thought the world of you,” Eric said. He'd meant his words as comfort; instead they triggered fresh tears.
“Oh, God, I don't want them to be gone.”
He looked at the suitcases and boxes lined up by the front door, at Josi sitting in the front window, waiting for Joe and Maggie to return, and at the gurney tracks on the carpet. If he felt the room closing in on him, what must it be like for her? He stood and held out his hand. “Let's get out of here.”
“Where?”
“My place. I'll fix you lunch.”
“I'm not hungry.”
“Coffee, then.”
She glanced around the living room. “I shouldâ”
“The hell with that,” he said. “Whatever âshoulds' there are that need doing, I'll take care of later. Right now it's you I'm worried about.”
She wiped her cheeks with long, tapering fingers, the nails sensibly short and buffed to a shine. “I'm fine.”
“Sure you are.” He helped her up and guided her toward the door.
“What about Josi?” she asked.
“I'll come back for her later.” It was obvious the cat was in the midst of her own mourning process and could not leave until it was convinced Joe and Maggie were really gone.
Julia waited with her arms folded across her chest as Eric locked the door. “Someone has been working in the garden,” she said. “The flowers look beautiful.”
To protect herself, she had focused on something inconsequential, the way people waiting for life-and-death surgery counted ceiling tiles. “Joe was teaching Jason how to garden.”
“Jason?
“My son.”
She pressed the flat of her hand to her forehead as if trying to contain a headache. “Oh, of course. Are Jason and his sister still here?”
“They went home two days ago.”
“Oh . . .” Julia frowned as if struggling to remember something. “But Maggie and Joe were still alive when they left?”
Eric nodded.
A look of understanding came over her. “Maggie must have planned to die last week on her birthday,” she said with conviction. “But she couldn't because the kids were here. How like her. Even at the end she put others ahead of herself.”
He dipped his head and reached up to rub a stiff muscle in his neck. He noticed Julia was wearing three-inch-high heels and sheer, glossy nylons. “I was going to suggest we go for a walk on the beach, but you can't go like that.” He needed to get away, if only for a little while. “I don't suppose you brought any other clothes.”
“The police called just as I was leaving for work.” She glanced up at the sound of a passing car. “I came right down. I don't know why. They said it wasn't necessary.” In a voice so soft Eric had to strain to hear, she added, “But I couldn't stay away.” She stopped and put her hand to her mouth to hold back a sob. “I thought about coming last week for Maggie's birthday, but I had all those damn meetings. . . . Maybe seeing me would have made a difference.”
“It wouldn't have,” he told her.
“How can you be so sure?” The look she sent begged him to give her an answer she could believe.
“Maggie had cancer, Julia. She was dying. Nothing you could have done or said was going to change that.”
“At least I could have seen her one more time,” she said, almost choking on her regret.
“And made her leaving twice as hard.”
“But what they did was so wrong. They should never have died that way. Life is too precious not to hold on to every minute.”
Plainly she'd never seen anyone in the last stages of bone cancer. The pain Maggie had been in was only the beginning. Eventually the narcotics she would have required just to make it through the day would have stolen the Maggie that Joe had known and loved. Her final breath would have been nothing but a formality.
When they reached his house, Eric opened the door and led Julia inside. She stood in the middle of the room, looking lost and unsure what to do with herself.
“Would you prefer tea?” he asked.
She gave him a blank stare.
“Rather than coffee. Or there's soda.”
“I don't think I want anything now. Maybe later.” She wandered over to the window and stared out at the ocean. “Sometimes it's hard to remember how much I used to look forward to being here.”
“You'll feel that way again.”
She shook her head. “On the way down I decided that when I leave this time, I'm never coming back. The real estate agent I talked to when I was here in May said I didn't have to come down when the house sold, that everything could be accomplished through the mail.”
The thought of never seeing her again hit Eric like an unexpected wave, knocking the wind out of him while it sent him scrambling for his footing. “Is that how you handle all your problemsâby running away?”
She turned on him, her face radiating anger. “How dare you say that? You know nothing about me or my problems or how I handle them.”
He'd expected a reaction, but nothing like this.
“You have no idea what my life is like,” she went on. “Every day I'm trying to do a job people under me are ten times more qualified to do. I'm hanging on by my fingernails because I know if I sell the company, half the people who helped Ken build the business into what it is today will more than likely lose their jobs. I can't do that to them . . . no matter what staying does to me.”
Julia turned so that her back was to him, closed her eyes, and bit her lip. But it was too late; the angry words were out, and there was nothing she could do to take them back. What was wrong with her? Why had she attacked Eric when he'd tried so hard to help?
She jumped when she felt him touch her arm. He turned her to face him again. She didn't see the expected anger in his eyes. In its place was something else, something she didn't understand. “I'm sorry,” she said. “I guess I needed a target, and you were the only one handy. I know it's not a great excuse, but it's the only one I have.”
In a move that seemed to surprise him as much as it did her, he kissed her. When his mouth closed over hers, it wasn't friendship or understanding or tenderness he relayed, but a raw, needful passion. She hesitated at the force of the demand, then responded on a primitive level, realizing instinctively how desperately she wanted what he offered.
For almost a year death and its aftermath had been a constant companion. No matter where she went or what she did, it was there in the memories, the demands, the expectations, the loneliness. Every holiday, every birthday, every dinner invitation with an uneven number of guests, the unending stream of mail that still arrived with Ken's name on it, the board meetings where he was more a presence than she wasâthey were like chips constantly being removed from the block of marble that was her sanity.
That morning the phone call telling her Joe and Maggie were dead had been the blow that threatened to topple her. And now Eric offered her a chance to taste life again. It simply didn't matter why. Sanity and reason were bit players in this drama.
She put her arms around his neck and pressed her body into his. Deepening the kiss, she opened her mouth and met his tongue with her own, thrusting with a deliberation that left no cloud to hide her intentions. She felt as well as heard the rumble of response that started in his chest and became a moan of primitive desire.
Julia pulled the shirt from Eric's jeans as if it were a barrier between her and freedom. She ran her hands up his tightly muscled back, digging her nails in as she moved down to his waist again. This was not the way she made love, it was not the way she asked to be made love to; it was a cry for help.