Island Girl (56 page)

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Authors: Lynda Simmons

BOOK: Island Girl
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The guests laughed and the justice smiled. “That will do just fine.” He turned to my mom. “Ruby Donaldson, are you ready to make your vow to Mark?”
“I am.” She smiled up at Mark. “But I’m definitely going to need my notes.”
The guests laughed again and Mary Anne handed her an index card. “Seems I have a poem too,” she said. And people laughed again and someone said, “That Ruby is such a card.” But they all went quiet when she lifted her eyes to Mark and started to speak.
“If ever two were one, then surely we. If ever man were loved by wife, then thee. If ever wife was happy in a man, compare with me, all you women, if you can. For this is the crown and blessing of my life. The much-loved husband of a happy wife. To him whose constant passion found the art, to win a stubborn and ungrateful heart.”
She slid the ring onto his finger and Mark didn’t wait to be invited. He wrapped his arms around my mom and kissed her then and there. The JP shrugged and said, “By the power vested in me by this province, I now pronounce you husband and wife.”
Everyone cheered and clapped, and Mary Anne cried, and I cried, and Jocelyn didn’t want to cry, but she did. Then she said, “I get it now. He loves her.”
The reception started right after the ceremony with waiters offering hors d’oeuvres and the photographer hurrying to take as many pictures as he could before the caterer announced that dinner was served.
“Where’s Liz?” my mom asked. “I want her in the pictures too.”
“She is here,” Nadia called, holding up a hand. “And she is coming.” Nadia shoved my sister along, smiling at the guests they passed. “She is so excited to be in picture.”
“Liz,” my mom said, and threw her arms around her.
For the first time in years, Liz hugged her back. Really hugged her, which made me need my tissue again.
“Family photo,” my mom said, waving me, Mark, and Jocelyn over.
We stood in a huddle, smiling and sniffing. Holding our positions long enough for the photographer to snap a couple of shots. Then my mom said, “Donaldson women only.” Mark and Jocelyn backed away, but my mom held out a hand to Jocelyn. “Like it or not, you’re a Donaldson woman now too.”
I thought Jocelyn might flip her the finger or turn her back. But she looked to her dad and said, “Is it all right?”
He laughed. “Are you kidding? I’m standing here in a skirt, for heaven’s sake. You get near a Donaldson, you become one. Go, go.”
The four of us stood nicely for a couple of shots, then we laughed and mugged for a few more. Then the caterer announced that dinner was served, and everyone filed into the clubhouse.
I sat at the head table beside my mom, and two places were set for Liz and Nadia at the table right in front of us with Benny and Carol and other neighbors who had known Liz since she was little. They greeted her with hugs and kisses, and shook Nadia’s hand and told her to be sure to ask Liz to do the Highland fling later.
Wine was poured and Mark rose with his glass. “Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to thank you all for being here, and I’ll keep this brief. A toast, to all who have come here today to celebrate something that should have happened a long time ago.”
“Here, here,” more than a few people called as chairs scraped back and glasses were raised.
My mom rose to stand beside Mark.
He lifted his glass. “A toast,” he said. “To all of you, our wonderful friends and neighbors.”
My mom lifted a fork, watched it hover in the air in front of her. Benny saw. Carol saw. Liz saw. Nadia saw. More and more people saw. And still the fork hovered.
“I’m doing this wrong,” she whispered to Mark, “but I don’t know why.”
“She’s got the right of it, folks.” He set down his glass and picked up his fork. “As Ruby says, to hell with the wine, let’s eat!”
“Let’s eat,” Benny called and raised his fork to her. “You’re a corker, Ruby Donaldson, a real corker.”
People were still talking about how good the food was while they pushed back tables and chairs and made room for the DJ and dancing. I met up with my mom in the ladies room and gave her the pill in my purse. “It’s late, I’m sorry.”
“No worries,” she said, swallowing the pill with water from the tap and wiping her mouth on the way to the door. “First dance is coming up. Wouldn’t want to miss it.”
At midnight, my mom threw the bouquet, Mark threw the garter, and then the bride and groom left to catch a water taxi into the city and a two-night honeymoon at the Fairmont Royal York. The caterer was serving coffee and tea with plates of wedding cake, and I was exhausted after dancing the fling with Liz, hip-hopping with Jocelyn, waltzing with Mark, and slow-dancing with Joe, who was a really good dancer.
“Have you kissed him?” Liz asked me in the bathroom.
“No.” My face went warm right away. “But I’m thinking maybe tonight.”
“Maybe tonight?” Liz grinned and lifted her hair from the back of her neck, trying to cool down after dancing with the drummer. “You have to tell me everything, you know that. Speaking of telling all, Mark asked me to work with him on the Swan Affair. See if we can get the police to back off on you girls.”
“Good luck,” I said as the bathroom door burst open, and Mary Anne grabbed my arm.
“It’s your mom,” she said. “You need to come now.”
Liz followed us out. “I thought they left.”
“They did. Shut up and keep walking. Don’t let on that there’s anything wrong.”
The three of us went through the clubhouse, nodding to guests and refusing offers of cake. Making our way to the door as quickly as possible without raising alarms. “Where is she?” I demanded as soon as we were outside. “Where’s my mother?”
“Over by the canoe club. Mark said they went back to the house to change and pick up their bags for the hotel. She was ready before him, so he told her to wait in the kitchen, but when he got down there, she was gone.”
“Gone?” I asked as we hurried along the street, everything around us now black and white, and a horrible grey in the yellow glow of the streetlights.
“He went looking for her right away.” She stopped us by the rack of canoes across from the club. “He found her quickly enough, but she didn’t know who he was. She wouldn’t let him touch her, she started to run. He was terrified she’d get lost again, so he called and asked me to get you girls and to be discreet about it.” She pointed to the canoe club building. “They’re back there. He won’t leave her, but she won’t go anywhere with him.” She lowered her arm. “He’s hoping you can get her to come home.”
Liz and I ran around the side of the building. It was darker back there, harder to see. “She’s here,” Mark called, and we moved toward the shadow by a rack of canoes. He was breathing hard, raking a hand through his hair. “She doesn’t know me,” he said. “She doesn’t know who I am.”
Liz put an arm around him. “She will. I know she will.”
“Grace?” my mom said, her voice shaky, soft. Like she was really afraid and going to cry. “Grace? Is that you?”
I still couldn’t see her. “Yes, Mom, it’s me. What are you doing in there?”
She came out from behind the canoes. “I don’t know,” she said, looking around. “I don’t know where I am.” She turned back and saw Mark standing there, as helpless, as lost as she was. “Mark?” she said.
He groaned with relief. “Ruby, you had me so worried.”
She walked toward him, laid her head on his chest. “I’m so tired, Mark. I’m just so tired.”
RUBY
 
SHOW ME THE ICE FLOE
The blog for people who know what they want
 
 
By Ruby Donaldson
 
 
 
 
Number 30 in a series. Or is it 31?
 
Shhh. Big Al is sleeping again. He’s been wide awake since the wedding three weeks ago, and so far I have fallen into every booby trap the bastard has set. Losing things, impatient with everyone, forgetting more than the names of celebrities, believe me.
But oddly enough, this feels like a good morning. Mostly clear. The fog thinner, like mist when it rises from the lake. Not enough to obscure important things, just enough to soften the edges. But it won’t last. Big Al will pump up the volume on his fog machine and once again I’ll be wandering around in a thick soup, bumping into that bugger at every turn.
Of course, Hope is still there at the corner of my mind. Telling me to have faith. Assuring me that a mircle is right around the corner. Or at least in the offing. Perhaps. If we’re lucky. Okay, probably not, but that’s not her point. Her point is that I must hold on because what I’m contemplating is selfish and wrong. Think about the people who love me. How will they feel if I hope on the next Ice Floe?
Relieved, if they’re honest.
Since the wedding, everyone has been on Ruby Watch. Even poor Jocelyn on days when Mark and Grace have to work, and Mary Anne has meetings in the city. No one talks to me about it, but I know they’re all worried about what happens in a few weeks. Fall is coming. You can feel it in the night air, bringing high school for Jocelyn and a new semester for Mary Anne. Who will babyst me then? Who will give up their life to tend to mine?
Let’s face it. I’m a pain in the neck for everyone, including myself. Naturally, Hope doesn’t want to hear that. Hope wants me to believe there are options, but Hope lies.
I have been to Dr. Mistry again, and she is the only one who is not surprised by my sudden decline. It’s true that some people will go on for years, the illness always chugging ahead, but more slowly than it has for me. Giving them the time that Mark and Hope have dangled in front of me like a carrot. Keep coming, Ruby, keep coming, you’ll reach it, don’t worry.
But I won’t reach it. Unlike Hope, Big Al is honest with me. He has me in his sites and he is moving in for the kill. I know the options, the choices, and they come down to this:
Take my life back from Al while I can or go quietly into that fog and disappear forever.
I don’t know about you, but for me, the fog is more frightening than anything I could encounter on the Ice Floe.
So here I am. I know it’s eight a.m. because the clock beside the bed tells me so. Outside, the sky is grey and clouds are gathering.
Storm’s coming,
as Grandma Lucy used to say.
Downstairs, Mark is making coffee, making breakfast. I’m in bed alone with my laptop and the sign on my ceiling—
Go canoeing
—because Mark’s letting me sleep in, letting me ignore the sign because I had a rough night. Nightmares, restlessness. That means he had a rough night too, but he doesn’t have the option of sleeping in. He has work to do, a wife to support. A wife who is sliding downhill faster than either of us imagined possible.
But it’s a good morning and I remember bits and pieces of the wedding. A piper. A fairyland. Mark in a kilt. What I don’t remember comes to me in pictures, popping up on my lptop screen, and in the special frames that Mark bought and put all around the house. There is one on the dresser. I see Mary Anne pop into the screen, wearing more pink than any woman should ever wear, yet looking fabulous as always. And Jocelyn, so pretty in a green dress and almost normal hair. And then Grace. Beautiful Grace. Even that horrible dress can’t take that away.
Now comes a picture of people I should recognize but don’t. Guests, I suppose. The important thing is that in every shot, people are smiling and happy. Enjoying the party.
And there’s me, smiling too. I look happy. I look good. For a fifty-something bride. Where is that tartan sash now? I’d like to find that sash.
Now there’s one of me and Mark together, under the arbor. I feel myself smiling just like I was in the picture. I like that kilt.
Another shot under the arbor. Mark sliding the ring onto my finger.
Looking down at my hand, I see it’s there still. White gold, engraved on the outside instead of the inside. So I don’t have to remember to take it off to see the words.
As fair you are, my bonnie lass, so deep in love am I.
A Robbie Burns poem. I’ve known the words by heart since I was little. Funny that Big Al hasn’t stolen them away. Look, there’s Liz.
It’s a good picture. She’s not so thin anymore. Not so pale. Stunning was always the word that came to mind with Liz. Stunning with her black, black hair and her dark gypsy eyes.
There she is again with me and Grace and Jocelyn. All the Donaldson women making faces at the camera, sucking in our cheeks, lolling our heads, definitely not proper wedding poses, and all because Liz is with us I’m sure, egging us on the way she always did. I start to laugh as we must have been laughing when someone took the pcture.
I hear the door downstairs open and close. Mary Anne’s voice. Mark going for his paper. No other voices, so the girls must be out biking or looking for birds. Did Grace and I ever get on a ferry? I don’t think so. I’m sure I meant to. Mary Anne’s voice again. I should get up.
There’s Liz again, with Grace, dancing the Highalnd fling. Liz came to the wedding. And she comes to the house now too. I know because Mark writes it on the sign above my bed.
Go canoeing.
And below that is another line—
Liz has been here this many times ++++
|. Six times.
Each time she visits, he puts another line on the sign. Six visits since the wedding. Six is a lot. I wish I could remember even one.
Mary Anne is puttering away downstairs. Puting on the kettle, making tea.
Time to go.

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