Authors: Marie Ferrarella
That
was happening more and more frequently these days, Stacey thought as she turned away from the closed door. She made her way back to the kitchen, trying to remember the last time Brad had kissed her goodbye without her first having to throw herself directly in the path of his outgoing lips.
That long ago, huh?
Once in the kitchen, which was sunnier than she felt at the moment, Stacey began to clear away Brad's plate with its only half-eaten piece of French toast. She supposed, in her husband's defense, for the most part she'd stopped waiting for him to make the first move, to lean forward and kiss her. Because, in her own defense, she didn't want to take the chance on winding up staring at the back of a closed door, feeling as if she'd just been kicked by a mule.
Feeling hollow. Just like this.
Is that all there is?
Damn it, why couldn't she get that stupid song out of her head?
Stacey felt a sudden, overwhelming urge just to cry.
Hormones.
They always picked the worst time to attack, she thought, fighting to reach equilibrium and some semblance of calm.
Stacey looked down at the dog, who, with Brad gone, had shifted her allegiance as she did every morning and followed her back to the kitchen.
Rosie was now wagging her tail, a hopeful look in her eyes.
“You just want another treat, you furry hussy.” She stroked Rosie's head and went to the cupboard where she kept the dog's wide assortment of treats. After taking out something that resembled plastic bacon, she tossed it to the animal. With a semileap, Rosie caught the treat and devoured it in the time it took to close the cupboard doors. “At least he talks to you,” Stacey said wistfully. “Someday, you have to tell me your secret.”
“Talking to the dog again, Mom?”
Stacey turned, surprised to see Jim enter the kitchen. Now that college was over, unless something out of the ordinary happened or the house was on fire, Jim did not acknowledge that any hours before eleven-thirty even existed. As he stumbled barefoot into the kitchen, wearing the ancient torn gym shorts he slept in, his deep blue eyes were half closed.
Six foot, one inch and still filling out his gangly torso, at twenty-two Jim looked exactly the way Brad had at that age. But carbon-copy looks were where the similarities between her two men ended.
At that age, Brad had been driven to make something of himself and to provide not just for himself and the family they'd hope to have, but for his ailing mother as well. Back then, she'd thought of him as being almost a saint.
Except for the sex.
Her mouth curved as she remembered even despite her efforts not to at the moment. The sex had truly been without equal.
And she missed it like hell.
Their son, as Brad was wont to point out over and over again whenever they
did
have a conversation, was not driven. After much pleading, Jim had attended UCLA, emerging after four rather lackluster years with a degree in fine arts. He'd gotten the degree, they both knew, purely to drive his father crazy.
“Damn it, he's a smart kid, Stace,” Brad had complained loudly enough for her to close a window. “We all know that. His SAT scores were almost perfect. Why is he throwing his life away like this?”
Arguments over Jim and the course of their second-born's life were as regular as clockwork. And there was never a resolution. Her only answer to Brad's question was that their son was striving to be the complete antithesis of everything that his father was. She kept it to herself.
“I'm talking to Rosie because she doesn't talk back or give me an argument,” Stacey told her son cheerfully. “That's kind of refreshing.”
Dragging a hand through his yet-to-be-combed, unruly hair, Jim shrugged off the answer. Taking the half-eaten French toast from her, he straddled the chair his father had vacated and put the plate down in front of him. He didn't bother with a fork.
Somewhere between the first and second bite, his lips dusted with a fine layer of powdered sugar, Jim nodded in the general direction from which he'd just come. “Upstairs sink is clogged again.”
Stacey sighed as she placed a fresh piece of French toast on what was now her son's plate. So what else was new? It
seemed that something was always going wrong with the sinks and toilets in the house. There were four of the first and three of the second. And that didn't take into account the house's two showers and tub.
And lately, the wiring was giving her trouble. The power would go out on certain lines. A month ago, half the house was down until the electrician came to the rescue. Brad had been furious over the bill. Rescues did not come cheaply.
Stacey dearly loved the house they lived in. She'd fallen in love with it the very first time she saw it, over twenty years ago. But she was the first one to admit that it was at a point in its life where it needed loving care and renovating. A great deal of renovating.
Her problem was, she couldn't seem to convince Brad of that. Practical to a maddening fault, her husband would only nod in response to her entreaties, then, when pressed for a verbal answer, would point out that they could make do by calling in a plumber.
“Which is a hell of a lot cheaper than getting renovations.” He'd give her that look that said he knew so much better than she did what was needed. And then he'd laugh, the sound calling an official halt to the discussion. “If I let you, you'd wind up spending your way into the poorhouse.”
She knew as well as he did what they had in the bank. What they had in all the different IRA and Keogh funds Brad kept opening or feeding. There was no way renovating the house would send them packing and residing in debtors' prison. Or even strolling by it. But telling him that she had no intentions of using solid-gold fixtures or going overboard made no impression on Brad. Neither did saying that most
of their friends had already updated their homes and added on years ago. Some had done it twice.
That kind of an argument held no meaning for Brad. He had no interest in keeping up with anything except for the latest advances in his field.
The only other thing that meant anything to him was making sure his children had the best. He wanted them to have every opportunity to make something of themselvesâhe being the one who defined what “something” was.
Julie had been canny enough to hit the target square on the head. Ever since she'd first opened her eyes to this world twenty-four years ago, Julie had been the apple of her father's eye. Julie could do no wrongâand she didn't. Their daughter was presently in medical school. Her goal was to become a pediatrician.
Jim, who had taught himself how to read at four because he'd been too impatient to wait for anyone to read to him, had been Brad's genius. He'd begun making plans for their son the second he'd detected that spark in his eyes, been privy to the innate intelligence their son possessed. But rebellion had taken root early in their son, as well. Once he got into college, Jim deliberately slacked off. There'd been a few times he'd been in jeopardy of being “asked” to leave the university. Whenever that happened, he'd study enough to get his grades back up. And then backed off again.
Somehow, he had managed to graduate this June. But he still seemed destined to infuriate his father at every turn and raise his blood pressure by ten points with no effort at all.
The problem was, his inherent aptitude for science notwithstanding, Jim had the soul of a poet. A poet who wanted
nothing moreâand nothing lessâthan to make music. Brilliant to a fault, with an IQ that was almost off the charts, he had no use for the academic world. As a matter of fact, he had gotten his degree not to please his father but as a grudging tribute to her. Because she'd begged him to give working in a different field a try, “on the slim chance” that he changed his mind later on in life.
She poured a glass of orange juice for Jim and set it down next to his plate. “I'll call the plumber from work today.”
He shook his head, his hair falling into his eyes. He left it hanging there. She resisted the temptation to push back his hair, knowing that would somehow only lead to accusations that she was “inflicting her judgments” on him. Meaning that while her generation liked to see a person's eyes, his didn't see a reason for it.
“Doesn't need a plumber, it needs last rites,” he informed her glibly. He raised accusing eyes to her face. “Bathroom's ancient, Mom. Why don't you do what you've been talking about and finally get the damn thing renovated?”
“Don't curse at the table,” she told him.
Jim pushed his chair back from the table roughly a foot. “Why don't you get the damn thing renovated?” he repeated.
She sighed, giving up the argument. Someone had told her that all sons went through a phase like this and that he would eventually turn around and be, if not the loving boy she remembered, at least civil.
“Your fatherâ”
The sneer on Jim's lips leaked into his voice. “Right, God says no.”
There were times when she could put up with it, and
times like now, when her patience was in short supply, that she could feel her temper threatening to flare. “Jim, a little respectâ”
He lowered his eyes to the plate, as if the French toast suddenly had all of his attention. “As little as I can muster, Mom. As little as I can muster.”
It was an old familiar dance and she had no time to go through the steps today, or to point out in how many ways Brad had been so much of a better father to him than her own had been to her. It only fell on deaf ears, anyway. Besides, she'd promised to go in to work early today to start implementing the new software program.
Stacey had worked at the Newport Pediatric Medical Group for the past fifteen years as their office manager, beginning as their all-around girl Fridayâshe really preferred the term “girl” to “woman” as she got older. All seven doctors associated with the group depended on her to keep things running smoothly. That included making sure that the new software package helped rather than hindered.
Still, she couldn't just leave the house on this note. Brad might drive her crazy at times, but that had no bearing on his relationship with his son. “He's your fatherâ”
Jim shrugged as he continued communing with his breakfast. “Not my fault.”
“No,” she said sharply, “but your attitude certainly is.”
Jim raised his head. He smiled at her with Brad's smile, tugging at her heart even as he infuriated her. “Tell him to change his toward you and maybe we'll see.”
This, too, was familiar ground. Jim claimed he didn't like the way his father treated her. “Your father's attitude is fine, Jim.”
The smile became a sneer. “Yeah, for someone out of the Dark Ages.”
“Last time you said he was like someone out of the fifties.”
The look he gave her said he knew so much more than she did. “Same thing. This is a partnership, Mom. Seems to me he treats you like a junior apprentice.”
Come back after you've been married awhile and then we'll talk.
Out loud, she said, “Marriage is more like a work in progressâ”
“So,” Jim cut in, “where's the progress?”
He made her tired. Arguing with Jim always made her tired. It was like boxing with a shadow and trying to knock it out. “I'll talk to you later.”
She was at the back door when he said, “I've got a possible gig.”
Stacey swung around. She knew he practiced with a band, had even heard them rehearse a few times. In her opinion, they had potential, even though they weren't playing anything she could remotely hum to. “That's wonderful. Where?”
He gave her a serene smile and offered her back her own words. “We'll talk later,” he said before disappearing from the kitchen with the last of the French toast.
Stacey
glanced at her watch. Okay, so she was going to be a little late. What was more important, getting to the office or having a few more words with her son?
Jim won, hands down.
It was no contest, even if there was a sliver of guilt attached. But then, she was raised Catholic and the blood of both Italians and Jews flowed through her veins. There was
always
a sliver of guilt attached. To everything.
Crossing to the threshold that led out into the hallway, she called after Jim. “You're going to miss these long, lengthy talks when you move out.”
Jim had just gotten to the foot of the stairs and he turned to look at her. He knew what she was really saying, no matter how much humor she laced around her tone. She didn't want him moving out. He'd come home every weekend while attending UCLA. And only gotten more estranged from the rest of the family during those years.
It was time for him to fly the coop for good. Way past time.
“Forget it, Mom.” He grinned as he proclaimed, “I'm not staying. The end of the week, I'm gone.” And then, because at bottom he didn't like being the source of hurt for her, he added, “There's always the telephone.”
She looked at him knowingly. “Which you won't use.”
He shrugged. “You never know, maybe I don't have any of Dad in me at all.” He stuffed the remainder of the French toast piece into his mouth. Powdered sugar rained from both corners of his lips.
His comment was a not-too-veiled remark about all the times she'd waited in vain for a call from Brad, telling her he was delayed, or had an emergency surgery. All the times dinner got cold and carefully made plans got canceled.
It was all true, but she still didn't like the stance Jim had taken against his father. Despite all his rhetoric explaining his attitude, she still didn't understand, still couldn't reconcile the loving boy she'd known to the cynically combative one she found herself confronting over and over again.
“Jimâ”
Jim held up hands that were dusty with sugar, stopping her before she went any further. “I can't stay here. He hates me.”
“He doesn't hate you,” she insisted with feeling. “He's your father, he loves you.”
Standing on the second step of the staircase, he towered over her. And used the image to his advantage as he looked down at her with a masterful sneer. “The two aren't a set.”
A part of her wanted to take him by the shoulders and shake him. “In this case, they are. He
does
love you, Jim, he just doesn't understand you.”
And neither do I,
she added silently.
The look in Jim's eyes had a hint of contempt in it. “That makes two of us.”
She jumped at the first thing that struck her. Because she could vividly remember how unsure of herself, of her choices she'd been when she was only a little younger than he was.
“You don't understand do you? That's only natural at this point in your life.”
Jim was quick to set her straight. “Him, Mom, him. I don't understand him. Me, I understand.” The affirmation was made so casually and comfortably, Stacey realized that her son actually meant it. “I just want to make music. My music, my way.”
His way.
The words echoed in her head. And how often had she heard that, in one form or another? Silent or implied. Brad's mantra. “There's more of your father in you than you think.”
She saw the annoyed frown and knew how much he hated being compared to the man he was trying so hard not to be. The man he so often so closely resembled in looks and in spirit. But there were times she just couldn't keep quiet, couldn't refrain from pointing out the obvious. And hope that she could get through to Jim. And he would stop thinking of himself as some sort of an island and realize that he was part of the family.
Stacey glanced at her watch again and winced inwardly. She should have already been behind the wheel of her car, stuck in traffic for the past ten minutes.
“To be continued,” she promised.
Jim spread his hands before him, giving her a little bow like the performer he felt destined to be. “I'll be here all week, folks. Till Friday. And then I shall be liberated.”
She shook her head. “I have no idea how you managed to survive all this cruelty heaped on your head all these years,” she remarked as she hurried back to the kitchen to get her purse.
Jim raised his voice so that it would follow her into the next room. “Me, neither.”
Â
“Well, you certainly don't look like a happy camper. The new software giving you trouble?”
Kathy Conners's new perfume preceded her as she leaned over Stacey's shoulder to glance at a screen that made absolutely no sense to her. Although she was better at it than the doctors she worked for, the computer was definitely not her best friend.
Stacey was.
Ten pounds heavier and two shades lighter blond than she had been in her wedding pictures, Kathy Conners was just half an inch over five feet. It was a fact that had annoyed her no end until Stacey had convinced her that petite was a far better description for her than “runt of the litter,” which was the way her older brother used to refer to her. She had known Stacey even longer than Brad had and it was Kathy who had gotten this job for her.
Stacey turned away from the screen. Despite her late start, she'd gotten to the office half an hour before everyone else. Early enough to begin installing the new program without having a gaggle of well-meaning but computer-illiterate doctors hovering over her shoulder, asking questions that only impeded her progress. Once patients began showing up for their appointments, the new software was put on hold.
“The software is being software,” Stacey replied. “Resisting having its code cracked at first go-round.” She shrugged. Since she'd become office manager, she'd learned a great deal about computers and software, all out of necessity. Trial by fire, so to speak. “But that's nothing new. Shouldn't take long to have everything up and running.”
Kathy shed the sweater she'd thrown over her shoulders and held tightly to her cup of coffee. “So why the frown?” She raised a perfectly shaped eyebrow. “Trouble in paradise?”
Stacey laughed softly to herself. “Today, playing the part of paradise will be hell.” The second the words were out, a faint, rueful smile gave the slightest curve to her lips. “Actually, that's not fair.”
Kathy stopped sipping her giant-size iced coffee. “That's your problem, Stacey, you're always thinking about being fair. Stop that,” she chided. “Nobody else is thinking about being fair. Life isn't fair. The world isn't fair,” she insisted heatedly. “Why should you be so concerned about always being fair?”
Something was up, Stacey thought, studying her friend. Kathy sounded way too bitter. “It's a dirty job, but someone has to do it. Besides, I'm not nearly as pessimistic as you.”
“Don't see why not.” Kathy took another long sip through her straw. “You're married, too.”
Stacey debated asking what was wrong or waiting until whatever was bothering Kathy came pouring out of her. “Marriage is not the end of the dream, Kathy.”
“It certainly isn't the beginning of it.”
Stacey turned in her chair, her eyes following Kathy as the latter moved around the office. Were those tears shimmering in her eyes, or just a trick played by the lighting? “You seem unusually bitter this morning.”
“Thanks for noticing.” After dragging the last bit of coffee down her throat, Kathy crushed her cup before throwing it into the trash with enough force to slam dunk a basketball in a championship game. “Ethan wants a divorce.”
Stacey looked at the calendar on the side of her desk. “It's the middle of the month. Doesn't he usually ask for a divorce around now? You get the end of the month, he gets the middle. You both realize you can't live without each other around the first?”
Her words didn't evoke a smile from Kathy the way they usually did. “This time, I think he's serious.”
On her feet, Stacey drew closer to her. Her voice was soft, compassionate. “Why?”
Kathy raised her head, shaking it a little like a kewpie doll about to stonewall anyone offering the slightest bit of sympathy. Her eyes were even brighter with tears.
“Because he didn't shout it. He just said it. Quietly. Like he'd been thinking about it and just said it out loud to see how it sounded.”
Stacey slipped her arm around the woman's shoulders. “Do you want to divorce him?”
This time, the tears became a reality. “Of course I don't. I'm forty-eight years old,” she snapped, pulling away. Wishing she had something to punch that wouldn't hurt her knuckles. Like Ethan's soft midsection. “I don't want to have to start over again with someone else.”
“There has to be a better reason to stay in a marriage than that,” Stacey told her kindly. This wasn't the first time she'd heard Kathy bandying the word
divorce
about. But before, it was Kathy who was vocal about leaving Ethan.
“Maybe.” She brushed the back of her hand against her damp cheek. There was a smudge of mascara across the skin. She murmured a curse. She was going to look like a bat and it was all Ethan's fault. “But that's all I got.”
Stacey didn't believe it for a minute. Taking her best friend by the shoulders, she forced Kathy to look at her. “And you don't love him?”
Kathy tossed her head. “What's love got to do with it?”
“Everything, Tina Turner.” Stacey laughed. “Everything.”
Kathy went on the offensiveâor thought she did. “After all this time, you still love Brad.”
There wasn't a single moment's hesitation on her part. “Yes.”
“Even though living with him is like being stuck in a reenactment of
Where's Waldo?
”
It was second nature for Stacey to defend her own, no matter what she felt to the contrary. “I see him more often than that.”
“This is me you're talking to, Stacey, the woman you've poured your heart out to.”
Stacey laughed softly to herself. Served her right for talking. “My bad.”
Kathy looked at her, confused. “What?”
She'd forgotten. Kathy and Ethan had three dogs and no children. Popular slang bypassed them all the time. “Something Jim says. It means my mistake. My error.”
“The error,” Kathy said with feeling, “is that God didn't make disposable men. You know, like disposable cameras. You get what you want out of them, then throw them away.” The thought really pleased her as she rolled it around in her head, picturing Ethan in a giant wastepaper basket. “Kind of like the Amazons. Those Amazons, boy, they had the right idea when it came to men. You fool around with them, and then you kill them. Neat, clean. No muss, no fuss.”
Stacey smiled. She knew Kathy inside and out. Knew what
was behind this display of anger. Coming up behind her, she whispered in her friend's ear. “He doesn't want a divorce, Kathy.”
Kathy gave up the ruse. Turning, she covered her mouth with both hands. “Oh, God, I hope not.”
“Why don't you go home early today?” she suggested. Granted, this was Monday, which was always busy, but this was an emergency. She could cover for Kathy as long as no one wanted her to give a shot. Besides, there were two other nurses to take up the slack, provided there was any. “Make something special for dinner, put on something sexy, lower the lightsâ”
A self-deprecating snort escaped her lips. “The way I cook, I'll have to lower the lights so he doesn't see what he's eating.”
“Then bring home takeout and warm it up. The meal isn't the main thing. You are.” Stacey squeezed her hand. “It'll be all right.”
Kathy raised her chin a little, half hopeful, half pugnacious. “Thanks, Dear Abby.” And then her smile softened. “I hope you're right,” she all but whispered.
Me, too,
Stacey thought.
Me, too.
“I've got to get back to this before the patients start coming,” she said, sitting down at her desk.
The front door opened and a child was heard wailing.
“Too late,” Kathy announced.
The words sounded more like a prophesy.
Stacey held back a shiver.
God, I hope not.