Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
Chapter 2
I sat in the luxuriously wide first-class seat, sipping a
vodka on the rocks. My heart was pounding at a furious rate and
I could feel the fear welling up in my chest. I had efficiently
disappeared and made sure my note would be found by Julie.
Hundreds of things buzzed through my head. I was very
apprehensive over not seeing my children and abandoning them, in
a sense. I thought that perhaps I should have gone through
psychotherapy instead of what was now seeming like an utterly
insane idea.
The first-class compartment was almost empty, so I had no
seat-mate. This situation left me alone with my thoughts. I
don’t think we were more than fifteen minutes in the air when I
was on my second drink. The alcohol effectively masked the fear
in my chest and I pushed the seat recliner button and leaned
back, drink in hand, and relived some of the events that led me
to this day.
The affair with Laura began rather harmlessly. The
building my business was located in had its own parking lot. I
started late and worked late each day, so driving into the city
was not the hardship it was for most people who live on Long
Island.
One hot summer night in August of 1980, I was waiting for
my car in the lot when I saw a tall, red-headed woman in her
thirties speaking with one of the attendants and standing next to
an ancient Chevrolet spewing steam out of its hood. Automobiles
have always interested me and I know a little about auto
mechanics, so I walked over trying to be of some help. One of
the hoses had sprung a leak and it was a fairly simple repair.
However, it certainly couldn’t be accomplished until the next
morning. I overheard the girl tell the attendant that she lived
in Jackson Heights and that it would cost her a fortune to take a
cab home and the bus and subway were unacceptable at nine o’clock
at night.
I introduced myself and offered to drive her home. I am
certainly a non-threatening-looking man. I’m five feet ten
inches tall, one hundred sixty-five pounds, dress well, and have
been told many times that I have a kind-looking face. She
accepted with no compunction and when my Town Car pulled up, slid
into the passenger’s seat.
I tried desperately to make conversation but only found
out the barest of details. Her name was Laura Morrisey and she
lived in an apartment in Jackson Heights, Queens, with her two
children. No husband was mentioned. She worked as a secretary
in a law firm in our building. I kept looking at her and thought
she was lovely but the conversation just didn’t click.
My first thoughts in relation to Laura were that if she
was not downright dumb, she was certainly the most unexciting
woman I had ever met. The drive to her neighborhood in Queens
was interminable. The woman was boring me out of my mind. I
dropped her off to polite thanks and was sure I would never see
her again in my life, nor did I want to.
One month later I was returning from lunch when I spotted
her on the elevator. She was standing in the corner, obviously
weeping. I sidled over to her and said, “I don’t know if you
remember me; I’m Bob Boyd. It seems I pop up whenever you’re
having a problem. Can I help?”
“It’s nothing,” she said. “You wouldn’t understand.”
“Okay,” I said, and moved away. I was surprised when she
got off at my floor. It seemed that her firm was located a few
offices from mine. As I walked toward my door I heard her say,
“Wait, please. I feel so rude and you’ve been so nice to me.” I
turned toward her and listened as she explained.
“This morning as I was on my way to my car, I found a
scrawny puppy so weak that he couldn’t stand. I didn’t know what
to do. I didn’t want to call the ASPCA. I was afraid they would
put him to sleep. I took him back to my apartment and tried to
feed him. I tried milk, solid food, cereal, everything I could
think of. I was so preoccupied that I didn’t even call my
office. I finally decided to drive him to the Spyer Animal
Hospital in Manhattan. I wrapped him in a blanket and put him in
the back seat. When I arrived, I took him into the hospital but
he was already dead. I went out to my car and found a forty—
dollar parking ticket on it. I called the office and got bawled
out royally for not calling.” She reached out and took my hand
and said, “Thank you so much for being concerned.”
I was so touched that I asked her to have a drink with me
after work. She explained that she was way behind in her work
but that she would take a rain check for the following evening.
I said in that case we should make it dinner. Surprisingly, she
accepted. I suggested that she not bring her car the next day so
that we could be more flexible in our dinner arrangements. She
agreed and we adjourned to our respective offices. I remember
vividly asking myself what in the hell I had in mind. I recalled
how boring she was that night in my car and knew that I was not
in the market for a one-night stand. I was surely not in the
market for a serious romance.
I am in the habit of laying out my clothes for the next
day before I retire. I found myself being extra selective that
evening and picked out a blue summer-weight suit, a voile off—
white shirt, and an Armani tie which I was particularly fond of.
I combined these with a pair of black ostrich shoes which I had
purchased in London the year before. I don’t know why I was so
excited, but I had great trouble getting to sleep that night.
I could scarcely wait to call her the next morning. When
I dialed her office she had indeed come in via public
transportation and was ready and eager to dine with me that
evening.
We departed the city at seven and drove across the
Queensborough Bridge to Long Island City. I took her to a lovely
seafood restaurant overlooking the East River and Manhattan
Island. It couldn’t have been a lovelier evening.
We ordered drinks and commented on the lovely view. She
was much more animated that she had been at our previous meeting.
She told me of her failed marriage to a postman, who, at the age
of thirty, had left her for an eighteen-year-old. She briefly
discussed her two children, Jeff and Jeanine, ages seven and
eleven respectively, and the difficulties of being a single,
working parent.
After having one drink and ordering another, I commented,
“I hope you’re not insulted, but that first night when I drove
you home I really thought you were dumb. I felt that I just
couldn’t get an intelligent conversation started.” She answered
by shrugging her shoulders and smiling weakly. “See,” I said.
“You clam up. I just can’t figure you out. I know you want to
be with me because you accepted my invitation tonight.” She
flushed and seemed to stare into space interminably. Finally,
she got the words out.
“I’m very shy and I don’t think I’m terribly bright. Men
seldom ask me out and when they do it’s never someone like you.
I’ve also never dated a married man, and I keep thinking of the
woman who broke up my home and I don’t want to be her.” Now it
was my turn to stare into space. I just didn’t know how to
address all those things at once. Laura turned to look at the
view and slowly sipped her drink. Her next statement was a real
puzzler. “Good-looking men never ask me out.” Now what the hell
did that mean? It could have meant that I was the latest in that
line or it could have meant that I was the first good-looking man
who ever asked her out. I looked her straight in the eye and put
on my most tender, understanding look.
“I understand. We can just have a nice dinner and chalk
this evening up to experience. I really don’t want to screw your
life up. You seem to be a nice person and I’m really not a
habitual woman chaser. In fact, I really don’t know what I’m
doing here tonight. It would probably be a relief if we ended it
right here, so just relax.” Her face took on a look of immense
relief and her attitude softened immediately.
The rest of the dinner was most enjoyable. We chatted
about everything from movies to music and politics. It turned
out that she was not formally educated but read voraciously.
While her choice of books was not my own, I always feel that
anyone who reads a lot picks up a command of our language. She
also read the newspaper from cover to cover every evening.
By the time we finished our coffee, we had each had,
including wine and Sambucca, about four drinks. I paid the check
and we walked out onto a steel pier which jutted into the river.
There was a warm breeze blowing and the lights of Manhattan were
exceptionally clear on an unusually dry summer evening for New
York. We stood silently looking at the skyline and, as if
through a prearranged signal, turned toward each other and
embraced. I kissed her ever so tenderly and we held each other
for a long time. I had the feeling that this girl was taking me
somewhere I had never been before. I remember thinking to myself
that I was in deep trouble.
***
The Swissair stewardess shook me out of my trance when the
first course of a sumptuous dinner was served in flight. It was
a delicious pat´e and I wolfed it down, realizing that I hadn’t
eaten all day in nervous anticipation. I drank heartily of some
excellent red wine and felt curiously cozy and content as opposed
to my trepidations of an hour before. While eating my dinner, I
read the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. When dinner
was over I did the Times crossword and dozed off to sleep. I
don’t think I’ve ever slept so soundly on a plane.
When I awakened, the sunrise was showing itself over the
horizon. I walked to the toilet and made myself as presentable
as possible, brushed my teeth, and felt pretty good for a lonely,
screwed-up guy on the run who couldn’t quite comprehend why he
was on the run. When I got back to my seat I checked my
briefcase in a panic. I had forgotten the check for one million
dollars that I had left there. I breathed a sigh of relief when
I found it and decided to transfer it to my jacket pocket. The
stewardess sat down next to me after bringing an ice-cold glass
of orange juice and some coffee. I was considering making a play
for her for my first adventure of the trip, when her conversation
immediately alluded to her husband and two small children who
were meeting her on arrival. Instead, I discussed Swiss banking
with her and she suggested that I visit the Banhofstrasse,
Zurich’s main shopping street, in which were situated hundreds of
banks. I explained that I wasn’t looking for a small branch
bank, but for the main headquarters of a reputable bank. She
left me momentarily and visited a prosperous-looking gentleman in
the front of the cabin. She returned with the name of a bank
written neatly in her precise, feminine hand. In less than an
hour we landed in Zurich. I changed some money in the airport
and took the most expensive taxi ride of my life to the Baur au
Lac Hotel.
Night flights to Europe are a tiring experience, to say
the least. The best part is that your hotel room is always ready
for you, even if you arrive at nine in the morning. The hotel
was as I remembered it, decorated with old-world luxury and not
in the least bit garish. Upon arriving in my room, I immediately
took a hot shower and slithered naked in between the sheets for a
three-hour, dead-to-the-world nap. When I awakened it was about
one o’clock. I hurriedly dressed and left the hotel to do my
banking. I opened an account and arranged to have a supply of
temporary checks. I was assured that my permanent checks would
be ready by the next afternoon. I returned to my room, realizing
that beyond this I had no plans at all. I sat down at the desk
to write a letter to Ann Marie. As I wrote, my mind wandered to
the beginnings of our relationship.
***
Julie and I had moved into a small apartment on Tenth
Street in the Village. I had a job on Wall Street and Julie
worked as an account executive for a polling company in mid-town.
In those days, a subway ride was a clean, pleasant, safe, and
inexpensive way to get around, and the convenience was wonderful.
We were deliriously happy. Our combined income was quite
comfortable and we led a romantic existence beyond compare. I
thought that I had never been so happy. About a year after we
moved in, Dominic and Ann Marie Lipani moved down the hall.
Dominic worked for the city and was a coarse, homely man with a
potbelly, whose personality matched his looks. His wife, Ann
Marie, looked like Anna Magnani, the Italian movie actress. She
was ten years older than I was and had an earthy sensuality and a
soft manner that was the very antithesis of her husband. They
had a son, Michael, who was ten years old and extremely
introverted.