Authors: Diane Munier
Chapter
13
It
was dark when Jordan and Cori reached the parking lot at the airport. That's
where she'd left her five-year-old Nissan. So they were spared the complication
of Jordan having to drop her at her home.
After
a long, silent hug, she kissed him sweetly. "We…I don't know now. Our
three weeks? I mean…we haven't said." She put her fingers on his lips
before he could answer. "Don't say."
She
was afraid it was over. That gave him some hope…her fear.
"We
haven't talked about it. Not in ten hours," she
whispered,
a sad smile.
He
slowly pulled her hand away and gripped it over his heart.
"I
told you…whatever you want."
She
scrunched her face a little. "That's…so passive," same sad smile.
It
was anything but.
"Nevertheless, not my will but
thine."
She
smirked.
"Gethsemane?"
"I'm
sweating blood."
"Wow,"
she said so softly.
She
looked at his chest, fiddled with a button on his shirt. "I need to…get
the lay of the land."
He
understood that. Seth.
"It's
so difficult to part," she whispered, her eyes on him now, the tear-shine.
He
dry-swallowed.
Shit. He was not wanting to do this now…in a garage. He wanted their room…at
the beach…her…he wanted, he wanted.
"You
need to get going. You can call me." It was the right thing to do…to say.
Give her permission to go. Bless the departure, even if it was ruined, he was
ruined.
She
was nodding, fiddling with his button still. "I…I don't know if I can go
back…to…to the beach." Her eyes, on him
, pulling
at him, at his heart. "I've…been afraid to say it."
"Go
on," he said taking both of her hands now, stepping back, trying to break
this thing, this force that held them.
"It's
hurting me to leave you. I hurt," she said, and he saw the tears welling.
She was guilty, and she shouldn't be. She was guilty toward her son and now
him. She was too quick to blame herself. This couldn't be helped. But still, he
hurt, too…his chest, his stomach.
"Let's
not make it so hard," he said. "I'll call you as soon as I'm settled.
I'll be around."
"That
helps," she said.
"Promise?"
"You
think I'll just take off? Never call?"
"I
wouldn't blame you. You have a right."
"You
call me. Ball is in your court."
"So…it's
not over? I mean…."
"Call
me," he said again.
Over?
It would never be over
in the truest sense of the word. What was she to him? "You think it's
been…light? Like I'm not affected?" he said, impatient now, angry and he
didn't know why.
She
was shaking her head. "I guess I'm drowning here. I'm not asking…I don't
know what I'm asking. I just…I'm afraid you'll leave."
"I
wouldn't do that. Unless…if you need me to. I would tell you first." He didn't
know if he could leave her. But she had a son, and it wasn't just up to him.
"I'm
sorry. I'm…freaking out." She rubbed her face and he saw how tired she
was.
"Hey," he
said stepping close. "You okay to drive?"
"Yeah,"
she said too heartily.
"I…sorry.
I just…sorry."
His
hands were on her arms and he pulled her to him for a hug. "I'll follow
you
to
your
exit. Take it slow."
She
nodded against him. He was finding the familiar territory of comforter.
Of doing the right thing.
One
quick kiss.
He backed off and grazed her arm with his little finger. Then he loaded her bag
into her backseat and she was in and he was all business now, a quick wave and
getting back in his car, carefully following her out of the garage and onto the
highway.
He
didn't follow her car, he followed her, the shape of her head lighting up in
the dark as cars passed from behind, as highway-lights graced him with a better
glimpse. They could barely stand to part. He wanted to follow her home, all the
way home, and for a while he'd consoled himself with the thought that he would
do just that, but the closer they got to her exit the more he knew he couldn't
do that, shouldn't. That's not what she'd asked for.
She
beeped as she turned off and he responded.
It
was hard to press on, to see her take the fork in the road, to take a different
path from hers. She hadn't pressed for which motel, he hadn't volunteered
because he didn't know.
And
here was the thing, two more exits and he'd hit Sydney. Cori had to wonder
where he was going. She had to wonder if he was returning. He hadn't spoken to
her about it, God the things they had not spoken about.
It's
not like he never said he wouldn't return to Sydney. But he never planned to.
Alisha
had seen to the sale of his house, his hundred year old house made from a kit
ordered from the Sears and Roebuck catalog and originally costing less than one
thousand dollars. He'd paid twelve. The place was ramshackle by the time he
adopted it, not untypical in a town of less than five thousand.
He'd
always gotten a kick out of that house, drafty and rotten and impractical,
small rooms and windows, slanting floors and the furnace's bad breath. Yeah he
was sick. He liked the odd thing, the different thing,
the
broken. Always did.
He'd
worked on it, his little house, had lots of help from this or that kid looking
for a project. Bill used to kid him for exploiting child labor. Truth be told
the 'help' they gave him usually amounted to more trouble than it was worth,
but the object was the time spent…the relationships he tried to build so he
could be allowed a look in to their hearts, or to speak the right sentence, at
the right time…to get out-front of a problem…for once.
Cori's
town, where her father had been chief of police…was shoulder to shoulder with
his old town. They practically had their arms around each other, well they did,
with little Whitney between. Little Whitney, home to some big country western
singer who never came back, never did…until the incident. These were the places
you left, the places you wrote about, thought about, fought against or
romanticized, for the rest of your life.
Sydney
was a small place. It didn't even have a marketable history. They said Lincoln
spoke there once.
Or slept there.
Or
took a shit there.
But now…it wore a badge, it sure as hell did.
But
it wasn't exactly…anything.
Mostly cornfields, little milo.
Two stoplights in the last decade and a refurbished movie theater.
A Chinese restaurant.
German farm
country.
No outstanding geography, but the subtle beauty of changing
crops and rocky pasture and grazing cows, of dramatic sunsets and the peaceful
attitude of a middle child neither the star not the darling.
A
middle child of the Midwest.
He
was an outsider, allowed in because of Bill, because the church had the roots
he lacked, because he'd eaten their potluck dinners, praised God for good
crops…and held them at the altar, in hospitals, at gravesides. Coddled their
babies and tousled the hair of their children and shown respect to their
grandmothers and laughed at the dry quiet humor of the men. And the women, they
cooked for him, baked for him, mothered him, and introduced him to their
daughters and he was careful, so careful to remember who he was, wearing a
trust that came with the job the way a priest would wear vestments, the call,
wearing it with deliberation and earning the right.
Well,
he was an outsider, but he got on.
And
then he killed James Carson. And then he went away.
Chapter
14
"Where
are you?"
Cori texted Jordan hours later.
He
was in a motel room in Little Whitney. He'd never made it to Sydney, didn't
want to.
So
he was lying on his back on a full-sized bed, on a green plaid bedspread he was
sure would show up filthy in a black-light test. His clothes were on, his shoes
were off, and he hadn't dug down yet to the sheets. He didn't think he would.
This
was the room they used in those movies…those movies where the guy and gal
checked in and never got out.
"In
Whitney," he typed back.
He
held his phone against his stomach as he stared at the gray popcorn ceiling and
breathed the pale cigarette stained air. He wasn't waiting for her
response…necessarily. He wasn't feeling much either, just staring, just being.
He wasn't sleepy. He had no answers, and worse…no questions.
The
manager had recognized him at the desk, not him, but his name. Yes, I am that
Jordan Staley. He had said that to the old-timer. Hell of a thing, yes it was, old-timer
said. Hell of a thing. Then the questions started, and he had evaded. It wasn't
hard. It wasn't easy. It just was.
"The
Rosebud?"
Cori texted minutes later.
It
was the only motel in Whitney. Only one that had endured the stories one small
berg could produce.
"Yes,"
he wrote back.
An
hour later there was a knock. He was still staring. It was Cori. He knew that.
But
he hadn't expected it.
Expected her.
She'd
been crying. "I…couldn't stay away," she said.
"Who
is with Seth?" he asked…and why? He wasn't a parent. Cori had the mind for
the right decisions. Why did he ask?
"No one.
He isn't running a temp. He's sleeping.
I left a note if he wakes up, but it's the middle of the night. He's twelve. He
knows my cell. I'm fifteen minutes.
Twenty at most."
"Okay,"
Jordan said,
then
he pulled her in, arms around her.
"How
are you?" she asked, her face against him.
"I
don't know," he said. He was fine…he just didn't know.
"Come
home with me," she said. "Come home with me and sleep on the
couch."
He
was already shaking his head.
"We
can't be apart," she said.
Oh.
But they could. They had to be. They couldn't leap to that. That…was too much.
To not be able to be apart?
What was she saying? But…that's
why he was here, right? He wasn't ready to let her go.
Just
for the three weeks. He wanted those.
"You
shouldn't be alone," she clarified, looking at him. "You haven't been
back here."
"It's
okay."
"I
don't know what I was thinking…to let you do this…then to be so preoccupied.
What was I asking?
Thinking?"
"It
doesn't matter," he said. He wasn't her son. He wasn't Seth. "It's my
choice to stay. You may need a ride…back." Was it time to say good-bye?
Was it suddenly that time?
This
was her chance to tell him. He took his arms away, stepped away. "How was
it with Seth?"
"He…he
wants to go back with me. He…he feels better. I don't know what it was…a virus.
What the heck is that?" she scrubbed over her face, and he knew he should
put his arms around her, give her permission to be where she was, to go with it
like a good…lover.
"You
would take him back…to the beach?"
She
looked at him. Into him, God those eyes,
that look
of
hers, so deep.
"He
has school," she said, as though arguing with him…with herself.
What
the hell was he doing? They had enough…this mother and her son. She was a
mother…not his whore. He knew better. The same old thing…his morality, his
code, the vestments, the mental shroud…he knew better than to take a woman…and
her so vulnerable…no commitment…treat her like…take…take.
"I…Cori…."
"No,"
she said. "Don't you dare…..
"
"It's
caught up with us Baby…real life."
"I'm
not afraid of that," she said.
"No?
You should be."
"Why's
that?" she took another step.
He
had his hand up, like to hold her away. "There's no future."
"You're
not ready? You're not ready for what…life? The only thing stopping us…this…is
you, then."
"Me?
What did I ever agree to? Three weeks. You didn't even make it."
"I
have a son," she said fierce.
"Exactly,"
he answered back, just as fierce, but more like an asshole. He was an asshole.
"You
can't love him?"
"I
haven't talked love," he defended himself. He was out to win now, win this
losing battle.
"But
you've made it…love…to me. Don't tell me I imagined…I know what it was."
He
shook his head. "What have we said, Cori? What have I said?"
"Words,"
she whispered, as if they were an afterthought to what was real, as if they
were secondary and overrated, and he couldn't agree more, but that didn't mean
they were worthless, useless. Words were commitment. Words…were everything for
them.
Asshole
was exactly what he was. "I have had no plan beyond being with you for a
well-stated amount of time. You changed the game—intentional or not."
Now
she shook her head. "I shouldn't have come. You're thrown. You're using it
now. If you let it go further…well you won't. You're cutting your losses. I get
it."
"Because
I won't come home with you and sleep on the couch? How long do you think that
would last? Then what? Seth calls me Uncle Jordan and we talk over old times?
What the hell then? Do I move in? Maybe we fix the past by setting up a life
where I overprotect and you get dependent and we both dote on him as a way to
fix it all."
She
was shaking her head, scrunching her face like she smelled something bad.
"Stop it."
"I
don't know what to do," he said too loudly.
She
was still shaking her head.
"How
do you go from so fucked-up to normal?" he said.
"You
mean…I thought what we had…
was
real."
"You
did?" he couldn't believe it. "What part? Me seeing your son get
shot? Or
you tricking
me in to some…fantasy? Or this
here where we try to legitimize this jacked-up mess? 'Hey Seth, this is Jordan
Staley, you remember him?’
“Let's
uproot your whole life cause Jordan doesn't think he can be around here…it's
kind of a downer for him now, okay buddy?'"
She
took the final step and hit him on the chest like she was hammering nails
there.
He
grabbed her wrists. "Cori," he said.
She
was crying and her face was down, she was making a sound, an animal's
frustration. He was sorry he'd said all this, hurt her. He put his arms around
her but she broke away and turned away and bent over, and she was sobbing her
heart out.
"Cori,"
he said again, trying to help her straighten, but she fought him off and he
stepped back. The manager was there, pushing the door open. They had never
closed it tightly.
"The
police
is
on her way," the manager said.
"It's
alright," Jordan said to him impatient.
"You
okay girlie?" the manager asked, ignoring Jordan. He nearly laughed to see
the pistol in the man's hand.
Cori
calmed some. "Yes…Mr.
Janes
."
"That
you Cori?"
Of
course he knew her.
"We
were arguing. Sorry. No need to bring Evelyn in." She meant the one cop in
this berg.
Mr.
Janes
eyed Jordan coldly. Well he would know how
violent Jordan could be…killer and all.
When
Janes
was satisfied enough to leave, Cori held onto
the door. It was cold, but Jordan welcomed it. She looked at him. "Please
don't leave without meeting him."
"Was
that always your goal? Is that…you said right away…when we met you said I
should meet Seth."
"I'm
not going to answer that," she said, like he was so far-off. "But if
you met him…it would be good for you both, Jordan. Then…well…you're your own
man. It's all I ask…and I know it's a lot. Would you meet Seth?"
"Why
are you pushing?" he said.
"Would
you?"
"If we had
finished this at the beach, what was your plan?"
She
grew very still, looking out at the dark parking lot. "I had a ticket…a
return flight. I would have said good-bye."
"I
don't believe you."
"You
didn't ask me what I would have hoped for, Jordan. You asked what I planned to
do."
"What
did you hope for?
Marriage?"
He felt like a huge
ass even saying that word.
She
smirked, but the tears were still hanging around. "Marriage…Jordan…for me…would
take the same courage you would have to find…to meet Seth."
"I'm
not afraid to meet Seth," he said immediately.
She
didn't comment.
"Are
you afraid of marriage to me…or in general?"
She
looked at him. "I…can't tell them apart."
Now
that hurt.
"So
what did you hope for?" he asked, his voice strange.
"What
happened between us…much as you deny it…misname it…exceeded what I hoped
for."
He
had no response to that.
"We're
both afraid," she said fiercely. "Do you get that? We both are. The
only difference is…I'm willing. I didn't have the luxury of taking myself
away…I had to stay here…live in it…
face
it every day.
So fear? What's that? Fear is where I live!"
She
came quickly to him, making the fists again, moving them toward him, but
stopping short of letting them land.
He
hadn't moved. He was looking at her, feeling the first ray of hope and he had
no idea why.
"Cori…I…,"
he whispered, incredulous. He knew. He finally knew. She was right.
He'd
been so afraid.
He
grabbed her then, wrapped his arms around her, cradled her head against him as
her hands clawed over him, even in to his hair, and she said his name several
times, and he didn't fight it, or
want
to.
When
she parted, she looked wrecked, exhausted. But there was a new peace between
them. Something had dropped there, an emotional bridge of sorts that bore their
combined weight and let them be in this strange new land. They'd been ugly and
ridiculous and intense and real and desperate. And still…Jordan was coming to
her house for supper. It was a moon-walk now, one giant step for mankind…for
them…meatloaf at five…and Seth.