Close Your Eyes (15 page)

Read Close Your Eyes Online

Authors: Amanda Eyre Ward

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Sagas, #Literary, #General

BOOK: Close Your Eyes
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At school the next day, Victoria passed Sylvia a note:
He’s even cute when he sleeps
. Sylvia stared at the paper. She was filled with both fury and fear. She did not write back and wouldn’t meet Victoria’s gaze.

After class, Sylvia cornered Victoria next to her locker. “You went into his apartment?” she yelled. “Jeez, Vee! That’s messed up!”

“I just climbed in from the fire escape and watched him sleep for a while,” said Victoria. “No biggie.”

Sylvia glared at her friend. She had the urge to strike her, to smack the self-assurance from Victoria’s face. She wanted to wound Victoria, make her feel as small as Sylvia herself felt.

“These were under his bed,” said Victoria, rummaging in her knapsack. She pulled out a blue pair of boxer shorts and handed them to Sylvia.

Sylvia raised her hand. How long had Victoria sat on the shag carpet, smelling the private smells of Robert’s sheets, his socks, his sleeping breath?

“Oh, you’re going to hit me?” said Victoria.

“If you go near Robert again, I’ll kill you,” said Sylvia in a low and serious voice.

“Yeah, right,” said Victoria, and her dismissive laughter boiled in Sylvia’s gut like poison. “You’re so funny, Sylvie,” said Victoria.

8

Pauline died of cancer when Sylvia was seventeen. Sylvia could still smell the apartment: beef broth and soap. She held her mother’s hand until the end. It was warm for a long time, and then it grew cold and Sylvia let go.

She took a bath with her mother’s Jean Naté bubbles. It felt like something had been torn down—the wall between Sylvia and death. Words ran through her head:
You are next in line
. After her bath, Sylvia went back into the living room. The sun was still hours away, and most of the apartment windows surrounding her were dark. The nurse would arrive at seven
A.M
.

She knew it was time to call the nursing service and have Pauline taken to the funeral home. Once Sylvia dialed, everything would run smoothly. But she went back to Pauline and took her hand again. “Bye, Mom,” Sylvia said.

After the doctor had signed the papers and Pauline’s body had been carried away, Sylvia closed the door to the building and was alone in the lobby. The few neighbors who had been roused by the ambulance had gone back inside their apartments. Sylvia glanced at the row of mailboxes as she walked toward the stairwell, then stopped. There was a postcard pinned to their mailbox, an outgoing missive. It had three stamps and was addressed in Pauline’s wobbly script. Pauline must have given the card to a visitor and asked him or her to mail it, thought Sylvia.

She pulled the faded card and stared at it. It pictured a dining room in a restaurant called Gene’s: wicker chairs, tables covered with white cloths.
GENE’S FRENCH-ITALIAN FOOD
, a swirling font said.
DISTINCTION
.
LUNCHEON, DINNER, COCKTAILS
. Pauline had written nothing except a name and an address in Holt, New York. Sylvia stared at the name: her father’s name.

Then she put the card back where it had been.

Sylvia dressed carefully for the funeral a week later. She wore a Fendi gray skirt and matching jacket. She’d been around the Brights long enough to know the power of wealth. Before leaving the apartment, she looked coldly at herself in the mirror. Her skin was unblemished, her makeup light. She pinned her blond hair back with combs, fastened her mother’s gold buttons on her ears, looped a matching necklace around her neck. If her father did come to the funeral, she wanted him to be proud of her, to think she was beautiful. She wanted him to feel sorry for what he had lost.

During the funeral service, Sylvia saw a portly man in an expensive wool coat move quietly into the church. His expression was polite. He looked sad and honest. But in his deep-set eyes and high forehead, Sylvia saw a resemblance to her own face. He had her nose, too, a bit wide. She wanted to run to him, to hold him, to punch him.

While the priest droned on, the man kept his gaze on the prayer book. Pauline’s old colleagues from Tiffany lined up to peer into the open casket (Pauline’s vain request), but the man remained in his pew. When the service concluded, Sylvia saw him preparing to leave. He checked his watch, gathered his coat from beside him. Sylvia knew she didn’t have much time. Darting past well-wishers, she walked straight toward him. He looked up with a distant but pleasant expression.

Sylvia reached the man. She was blinking back tears already. His hair was trimmed neatly around his ears, which were Sylvia’s ears, the lobe attached and fleshy. “Hello?” he said.

“I know who you are,” Sylvia said. She smiled up at him, and what had she expected? An embrace after all this time? Did she think he would adopt her, take care of her? In a way, in a small part of her heart, she did.

His eyes darted upward, the only evidence of his deception. And then, without missing a beat, he met Sylvia’s hopeful gaze. “Who am I?” he asked.

“You’re my father,” she said. “I’m Sylvia.”

The corners of his mouth lifted, and he looked for all the world like a good man. But he said, “No, Sylvia. No. I can’t be your father.” He cupped her shoulder and turned to go. “I am very sorry about your mother,” he said. And then, before walking away and letting strangers take his place, he kissed her on the cheek.

Sylvia’s shoulders fell forward, but she wouldn’t rush after the man, wouldn’t ask for help or love, like Pauline. She tried to make a mask of her face. She had to turn around, to go back to the scraps of her life.

In a corner of the church, she saw Victoria and her mother. Mae stood with her arms crossed, her black hair neatly curling at the padded shoulders of her suit.

Victoria was watching Sylvia’s father, staring daggers at his back. She was fiercely loyal, like a pit bull. Mae was looking at Sylvia. She lifted her chin and walked over briskly.

“Come on,” she said, reaching out to Sylvia. “You’re done with all of this, sweetheart. Come with me. You’re a Bright girl now.”

A few weeks later, Victoria took Sylvia to the party on the beach.

9

The Cleveland Greyhound station was located on Chester Avenue, which sounded quaint but was not. From a grimy booth (why—really,
why
, did people feel compelled to stick their used chewing gum on pay phones?), Sylvia decided to call her own cell and check for messages. If she dialed the number and hit the pound key and her password, she could hear the messages without making the phone ring on the kitchen counter. What was Ray doing now, she wondered—had he gone to the club to look for her? Most likely, he was fixing a drink, settling into his La-Z-Boy recliner and flipping through the channels, resting his drink on top of his large belly. It was disgusting—revolting! A stomach big enough to rest a cocktail on!

As she dialed, Sylvia watched a throng of people smoking. They were confined to a glass-walled smokers’ area but seemed genial enough, lighting each other’s cigarettes and smiling. Sylvia smoked sometimes after a few glasses of wine. But that was over, too: the smoking and the wine both, for a while. There was a woman with a baby in the smokers’ area. The woman held the baby with her free arm. It was wearing a blue outfit, so perhaps it was a boy. If Sylvia had a girl, she’d let the girl wear blue, too, whatever she wanted. But the child would have to eat healthily. And not too much TV, for sure. Books, lots of books. Sylvia smiled at the thought of a plump child in her lap, pointing to pictures of animals in a book.

As promised, Victoria had called back, full of apologies and empty promises (“a girls’ weekend” probably wasn’t what she needed, Sylvia thought). Sylvia’s boss had checked in, wondering if she had swine flu.

Sylvia erased both messages. She decided she was hungry for a midnight snack. There was a Bob’s Big Boy adjacent to the station, with a plaque reading
PLEASE SEAT YOURSELF
. When a sleepy waitress with lots of mascara came over, Sylvia said, “I’ll have the Brawny Lad burger with onion rings. And just some lemonade. No, you know, make it the Super Big Boy. I’m really hungry, because I’m with child.”

“Are you, now?” said the woman.

“Yes,” said Sylvia. “Is that how you say it? ‘With child’?”

“I don’t think so,” said the waitress. “But I don’t know, I guess you can say it however you want.”

“You’re the first person I’ve told,” said Sylvia.

“Okay,” said the waitress.

“I don’t know if it’s a boy or a girl,” said Sylvia.

“I’d say boy,” said the waitress.

“Really? How can you tell?”

“I’m just guessing,” said the waitress.

“A boy,” said Sylvia. Wonder ran like water from her scalp to her toes. “A boy,” she said, more quietly.

“I’m going to give you a slice of pie on the house,” said the waitress. “As long as nobody sees me take it.”

“Thank you,” said Sylvia. “That’s really nice of you.”

“I can just say I dropped it on the floor and threw it out,” said the waitress. “It’s no big deal.”

“I appreciate it,” said Sylvia.

“There’s this thing you can do with a wedding ring on a string,” said the waitress. “It’ll tell you boy or girl for sure. But I guess neither one of us has a ring at the moment.”

“Right,” said Sylvia. “That’s true.”

“I was married once,” said the waitress. “But anyway.”

Sylvia couldn’t think of anything to say to that, so she looked down at her place mat.

“I’ll put your order in,” said the waitress.

“Thanks,” said Sylvia. She looked out at the rain and thought about a boy.
Charles
, she thought.
Benjamin. Scott. Jennings
. She had never been so happy in her life.

When she was so full she could barely speak, Sylvia went back to the station and boarded the next bus, for the last leg of the journey. Thankfully, there was a row she could claim for herself, and she stretched out, yawning.

She daydreamed about her mother. Pauline would come home from work at Tiffany and put on her bathrobe. If Sylvia rubbed her feet, Pauline would stay still and talk to Sylvia. In the overheated bus, seven hours from Manhattan, Sylvia remembered her mother’s favorite story. “I was so young, so full of hope,” Pauline would begin.

Pauline bought the green dress during her lunch hour, eating her ham and cheese sandwich as she walked back to work. She had stored the sandwich in her handbag; the slice of American cheese and the butter were soft. After she finished, she shook the waxed paper and folded it, slipping it into her bag to use the next day. Then Pauline thought about Izaan Mahdian and what she had to tell him, and she threw
away the waxed paper, letting it fall to the sidewalk, thinking that perhaps she’d never have to pack a sandwich again
.

Some of the girls were standing outside as Pauline approached the store, and red-haired Carole said, “Well, la-di-da! Who’s shopping at Saks?”

“Special occasion,” Pauline said, giving them what she hoped was a mysterious smile and slipping into the building. All afternoon, as girls like her (or not like her—girls like she wanted to be, girls who’d never been to Brooklyn or Queens, never even been south of the Empire State Building) chose engagement rings, and men like Izaan bought cuff links and gold watches, she allowed herself to dream of being on the other side of the glass counter
.

Izaan was meeting her at the Carlyle Hotel at six. She had told him it was very important, and he had raised his eyebrows and said couldn’t she tell him important things right there, in his bed? He was brash, proud of his body, unashamed of sex, though he was betrothed to a woman in Egypt—an arranged marriage—one that would unite two powerful families
.

Pauline and Izaan had met when Izaan had bought the girl—her name was Dalia—a diamond solitaire and had it sent to Cairo, Egypt, insured for the full value, nestled in a midnight-colored velvet box. Now that Pauline had triumphed, she felt sorry for Dalia. And she wanted to deliver the news to Izaan over cocktails at Bemelmans bar, her collarbones exposed in a green silk dress
.

There was no time to return home to Brooklyn; Pauline waited nervously for everyone to leave so she could change her clothes in the employee bathroom. Usually, she left as soon as her shift was over, and a few girls glanced at her curiously as she read
The Waves
in the corner of the smoker, uncomfortable in a folding chair. Her heart was racing and she could barely concentrate on the words before her:
“I love,” said Susan, “and I hate. I desire one thing only. My eyes are hard.”

Carole was the last to depart. “What are you doing here, Pauline?” she said rudely, her hand on a cocked hip. She had put on a new outfit, too: a miniskirt and a tight poorboy sweater
.

“I’m reading,” said Pauline, staring at the page. Izaan was probably finishing up his last call of the day, stacking his papers, rising and taking his hat from the coat tree in his office. Was he thinking of her, anticipating their kiss?

“Bookworm,” said Carole jovially. “Want to join me for a drink at P. J. Clarke’s? Me and some of the girls.”

“No, thank you,” said Pauline. “I’d better get home.” She turned the page. “I just want to finish this chapter.” She thought of Izaan putting on his overcoat, wrapping a scarf around his neck. He was tall, with wiry brown hair. He dipped his comb in lotion in the mornings, slicking his hair back, pressing it into place with his palm. Like Pauline, he was a product of the fifties. He wasn’t growing a mustache or wearing bell-bottom pants. He wanted a wife in a bra, a wife who would happily stay home and cook for him. He’d complained about Dalia. “She wants to go to university, but what the hell for?” he’d said. Pauline had nodded mightily, sipping her root beer
.

“Well,” said Carole at last, “see you.”

“Yes,” said Pauline, “see you.” But in her rib cage she held the hope, warm and fragile as a new-hatched bird, that this would be the last time she ever saw Carole, that after tonight she would move into Izaan’s apartment and he would not allow her to set foot in Tiffany & Co. again. He would buy her jewelry from somewhere else—Cartier, maybe, or Bulgari. (And what would her mother do without Pauline to care for her? She’d have to make the best of it, Pauline decided definitively, grimly.)

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