The Lavender Hour (30 page)

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Authors: Anne Leclaire

BOOK: The Lavender Hour
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“How was the flight?”

Lily ignored the question. “Listen, Jessie, I have no intention of coming in and taking over. I only want to support you in this.”

“But…”

“Well, are you sure this lawyer knows what he's doing? How did you find him, anyway?”

“Faye.”

“Oh,” she said, her voice suddenly flat. “Faye.” An expression I couldn't read flitted across my mama's face.

“Where's Jan?” I asked.

“He's still in Italy,” Lily said.

“He didn't come with you?”

“He wanted to, but I told him to stay with the Odyssey. He sent his love.”

“God, I'm sorry, Mama. You shouldn't have come all this way.”

“You don't have one earthly thing to be sorry for, Jessie.”

For a moment, I felt her love and knew it to be strong and true.

Then Gage returned. The three of us ate soggy sandwiches and drank coffee, and then it was time to return to court.

N
ONA LOOKED
old, beaten. Over the summer, she had lost more weight, and when she took the stand, she stumbled, suddenly frail. She wouldn't meet my eyes. She spoke softly as she identified herself, gave her address, answered the opening questions, and Nelson had to keep asking her to speak in a louder voice. After they had
gone through the preliminary questions, he turned toward the easel that held the oil painting.

“Do you recognize this painting?” he said.

“Yes,” Nona said, her voice suddenly firm.

“Would you identify it for the jury?”

“That's Luke's.”

“Are you positive?”

“Absolutely,” Nona said. “That is Luke's painting. His college roommate painted it.”

Next Nelson picked up the green plaid shirt. “And do you recognize this?”

Nona reached for the shirt, scrunched the fabric between her fingers, pressed it against her abdomen, whispered, “Yes, this is my son's.”

“Are you certain?”

“Yes.”

“Forgive me for asking this, Mrs. Ryder, but how can you be absolutely certain that this shirt belonged to Luke?”

Nona stroked the shirt, her eyes closed.

“Mrs. Ryder?”

Slowly Nona opened her eyes. She turned the shirt inside out, held it up for Nelson to see. “Here,” she said. “You see here where the stitches are red along this seam? It's where I mended it for him. I had run out of green thread.”

N
ONA STAYED
on the stand for more than an hour while Nelson led her through the months of Luke's illness up to the last day of his life, all of it captured by the news camera and the reporters. She told the jurors how she had gone to take a nap, leaving him in my care, how when she'd woken up, I had told her he was sleeping, how later when she'd gone in, he seemed to be asleep and she hadn't wanted to disturb him since he'd had a bad night, and how, finally, later in the evening when the health aide arrived, they had gone in together and found that Luke had passed.

“And to the best of your knowledge, who was the last person to see him alive?”

Nona finally looked at me. “She was,” she said. “Jessie.”

“Mrs. Ryder, during these last months of his life,” Nelson said, “was your son alone?”

“Alone? I'm not sure what you mean.”

“Was he isolated?”

“Oh, he was never alone. We made sure of that.”

“Who was with him?”

“Well, I was always there. And Rocker. His dog. Until Luke got very sick and felt Rocker would get better care if his friend Rich looked after him. And Paige stopped by when she could. And of course the hospice people.”

“Who were the hospice people?”

“There was Ginny, his nurse.”

Nelson checked his notes. “That would be Virginia Reiser?”

“Yes. She came about twice a week to check on him, monitor his medications. And Jim came three times a week, more toward the end.”

“By Jim, you mean Jim Robbins, the home health aide?”

“Yes. He would help with Luke's personal care. Washing him, things like that.”

Nelson looked back at his notes.

Without waiting for his next question, Nona continued. “I was always glad when he came. Luke was, too. Jim always made him laugh.” A hint of a smile crossed her face.

“He made him laugh?” Nelson turned to the jury as he repeated her words.

“Yes.”

“Can you tell us more about that?”

“Well, Jim would tell these jokes. Silly, really, but they'd make us all laugh. Luke always seemed better after he left.”

Nelson paused, making sure the jury digested this last bit. The
dying man laughed. “And the defendant, Jessica Long, she also came to the house.”

“Yes.”

“As a volunteer?”

“Yes.”

“And what was her role in his care?”

I thought that Nona would look at me then, would remember the cups of coffee we had shared, the hours we had spent together, remember, too, how I'd cared for Luke, how she had told me I was good for him.

“She was supposed to help us out,” Nona said, staring straight ahead.

“How was she supposed to help?”

“She was supposed to stay with Luke if I had to go to the store or to the dentist. Things like that. So Luke wouldn't be alone.”

“How long would you be away?”

“Not long. No more than an hour. I didn't like to be away from him for long.”

“And during the times that the defendant was there, did she ever encourage you to stay away for longer periods of time?”

“Yes.”

“Please tell the jury what she said.”

“Well, once she said I should go back to my home overnight. She said she would stay with Luke until I got back.”

“Did she say why you should go home?”

“She said I should get my hair done.”

One of the jurors made a noise, not quite a gasp. It wasn't like that, I wanted to tell them. Not like what it sounds like. Nona had been exhausted and had wanted to go home, had missed her house. How easily things could be taken out of context, twisted. I started to say something to Gage, but he motioned for me to be quiet.

Judge Savage asked Nona if she would like to take a short break, but she said she would continue. The bailiff offered her water. Even
from the defense table, I could see Nona's hand shake when she reached for the glass.

Nelson flipped through his notes. When he resumed, he asked Nona to describe for the jurors what a typical day had been for Luke, how he had occupied himself.

“He watched TV,” she said. “And did the crossword. And he liked to sit by the window and listen to the birds.”

I could see all too clearly the portrait of Luke the jurors must have had in their minds. A man loved and cared for, sitting in his room—perhaps as they themselves had, when recovering from a cold or the flu—watching television, reading the paper, laughing at jokes. Listening to birds. There was no place in this vision for vomiting; cruel, unending pain; despair.

“Mrs. Ryder,” Nelson said, “did your son ever speak to you about ending his life?”

“No,” she whispered.

“Could you repeat that, please? I'm not sure the jurors could hear.”

“No,” Nona said, her voice stronger, sure. “No, he did not. Not once.”

Nelson turned to Gage. “Your witness.”

Gage kept his cross to a minimum, basically trying to counter the DA's picture of Luke with one of a very sick and dying man, drawing a reluctant admission from Nona that, during the time she had been napping, it was possible Luke had another visitor on the afternoon of his death, but the damage had been done.

Nona's testimony hadn't been as dramatic as Paige's. She hadn't cried or shouted accusations or displayed contempt for me. She just broke the jurors' hearts.

And that ended the fifth day of the trial.

twenty-seven

C
EE
C
EE INSISTED ON
staying with me at the commuter parking lot while I waited for Lily, who had driven over to Hyannis with Irene to pick up a rental car. Earlier, we had made plans hurriedly in the courthouse corridor, agreeing to meet at the Barnstable lot, and then Lily would follow me home.

I had started to explain that I was no longer at our cottage, but of course Lily knew that.

“Ashley probably told you,” I said.

“No, Faye did,” Lily said, her voice strangely flat. She had already rejected the thought of staying at the Harwich Port cottage, put off by the idea of reporters tracking her there, and had mentioned getting a room at a B and B, but I insisted she stay with me. Of course that was what she wanted all along, and so did I.

We made a brief detour by a market so Lily could run in for some groceries. She suggested we go out to dinner, but I couldn't face the possibility of being recognized, and the end result was that we agreed to eat in but Lily would cook. I told her I had some soup and other leftovers—she was exhausted by the flight and the day at court—but she insisted on cooking. While she shopped, I waited in the car, growing edgy, suddenly feeling defensive about the evening ahead. When we finally arrived at the house, Lily proclaimed it “charming,” sounding for a moment like her old pre-Jan self. I cleared the worktable and supplies from the second bedroom and suggested she take a nap before dinner, but she said no and went off to the kitchen. I changed out of my suit and took a quick shower, a vain attempt to wash the courtroom from my body. I heard her on
the phone to Jan despite the time difference, which would make it later in the night for him. When I came downstairs, the house was filled with the scent of onions and some spice I couldn't identify. Coriander? Cumin? Lily was in the living room, kneeling in front of the fieldstone fireplace, breaking kindling and laying logs. I saw a thin circle of pink on the crown of her head where her hair was beginning to thin.

“Shall we take a walk before dinner?” she asked.

“If you want,” I said.

We donned sweaters and Windbreakers and walked down the cliff to the beach, heading west, into the setting sun. As if by a mutual pact, we did not speak for a long time. Lily was the first to break the silence.

“Are you sure about this lawyer of yours?”

I knew what she must think of Gage, with his baggy suits and those ridiculous lizard elevated shoes. “I trust him,” I said. “He's savvy.” I told her about the day of the jury selection and how Gage had information on each juror and challenged the woman who had seemed friendly to me but had donated to a Christian Right cause.

“I'm not criticizing, Jessie. Just concerned.”

“I don't want to talk about any of it right now. Okay?”

“Okay, then, whenever you're ready.”

We walked along, the silence heavy. Again Lily was the first one to break it. “Tell me what this year has been like for you.”

I thought she was curious about my plans for the future: Had I gotten a job, gotten myself straightened out, made good use of her largesse, the sabbatical?

“I don't have a job yet.” Again I felt like the fuckup of the century. “So the year hasn't done what it was supposed to, if that's what you want to know,” I said, hearing and hating the defensive sound of my voice. I waited for Lily's lecture.

She turned and looked at me. “Oh, I think it has,” she said.

I didn't have the first clue what she meant by that but felt we
could easily edge into an argument, slip into an old pattern. I switched the conversation away from myself. “Tell me about the trip.”

“Well, you know how long those overseas flights are. But it wasn't bad, considering. Jan insisted I fly business class.”

“Not the flight over. Last summer's trip. The transatlantic sail.”

Lily smiled. She looked pretty, then, less tired. “Oh, Jess, it was fantastic,” she said. “Didn't you read the e-mails Jan sent?”

“Yes.” I didn't have a computer, but Ashley had printed out the messages Jan had written each day and mailed them to me. I recalled some of the details: storms, life at sea, how Lily had found the hardest thing was boiling water for pasta.

“It's something I'll never, ever forget. I wish you could have been there. The things we saw. Dolphins and whales. A loggerhead turtle. And birds. When there was nothing else, there was always seabirds. Once we saw a Dole pineapple cargo ship heading to Europe. Some nights, the skies were clear and motionless. And there were phosphorescent bubbles in the wake of the boat. They looked like fireflies in tall grass.”

I remembered reading something in one of the letters about storms and recalled my own terror at the thought of Lily in the middle of the ocean, unprotected. I'd had to stop reading.

“Were you ever afraid?” I asked.

“Oh yes. But Jan would remind me that the boat was built to handle all kinds of deep-ocean weather.”

“Did you get seasick?”

“More than once. And bored. And tired. But I never once regretted it.”

“But why did you go? I never understood that.”

“Lots of reasons.”

“So give me one.”

“Sometimes you have to take a journey to find yourself.”

“I didn't know you were lost,” I said, a lame joke.

Lily slowed her steps—she'd set the pace when we started out, and we had covered a lot of ground—and then continued as if I hadn't spoken.

“I wanted my life to get bigger,” she said.

“I don't understand.”

“I looked at my friends and saw their lives gradually shrinking. I thought about my mama and daddy and how, before they died, the territory of their days grew smaller and smaller. Your granddaddy Earl used to hike the Blue Ridge, and in the end, he was afraid to take a trip to the store without your grandma Rose. Neither of them would even go into the city. I didn't want that to happen to me.”

“It wouldn't have,” I said automatically.

She shook her head. “It happens so subtly, Jessie. You get a little uncomfortable driving at night, so you stop. You no longer like going to the movies or out to dinner alone, so it gets easier to stay home. In increments, so tiny you don't even notice, you give your life away. I wanted my life to get bigger, not smaller.”

I felt a surge of jealousy. And then, unexpectedly, pride. I slid my hand into Lily's, suddenly feeling close to her in a way I seldom had growing up. Then we mostly fought. And even when I was in my twenties, we never really shared. Ashley was the one Lily usually traded confidences with. This conversation was deeper than most we'd had. Had crossing the ocean caused this change in Lily? Or had Jan? Or was I the one who had changed?

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