The Last Original Wife (16 page)

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Authors: Dorothea Benton Frank

BOOK: The Last Original Wife
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I'm not coming back. I'm sorry to tell you this in an e-mail, but I just don't feel like hearing you scream at me ever again. Ever. When I hear you in my head yelling like I killed somebody because the dry cleaning bill went up or I want to give a lunch for my dearest friend's daughter's wedding, my heart starts to pound and I feel like I'm going to be ill. I can't take it, Wes. Not for one more day. I'm sorry. Leslie P.S. Please remind Martha to water my topiaries. Thanks.

I reread it ten times. There I was, apologizing when he's the one who should've been apologizing. Was I really sorry that I didn't want any more abuse from him? What was the matter with me? I hit the send button. My marriage was beyond ridiculous.

Jonathan arrived at six on the nose. This time I had put out some pâté and cheese with crackers in the den behind the kitchen. The den was more discreet than the parlor in the front of the house where anybody walking down Chalmers Street could peep through the windows and see me with him. I mean, it wasn't that we had anything to really hide, but still. And it was nice to have the terrace at our disposal too. We could step outside from the den and enjoy Harlan's tiny garden.

There was still at least two hours of daylight left, but I had switched on a couple of small lamps so that when we got home it wouldn't be pitch dark. Coming into dark houses made me nervous for some reason. Maybe a few lights would keep the ghosts at bay. Anyway, there stood Jonathan, wearing a multicolored striped seersucker suit, and he smelled like something so delicious it was all I could do not to bury my nose in his neck.

“You smell so good!” I said. “Come in!”

“Thanks! And you look beautiful!”

“Well, thanks! Do we have time for a glass of champagne? Or something else?” Like a big make-out session?

“Why not? Our table's at seven. What are you grinning about?”

“Oh, nothing! I was just wondering how all your seersucker will fly in California?”

“Good question.”

We smiled. “And where are we headed tonight?”

“FIG. Very groovy restaurant on East Bay. All the groovy people go there. It seems that if the restaurant has just one name, it's a groovy place. You know, like Cypress, Husk, McCrady's, FIG, Fish . . .”

“That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard you say because you also love the Restaurant at Charleston Place and Grill 225 and Rue de Jean and High Cotton and need I go on? And they're all pretty cool, if you ask me, Dr. Groovy. Now, about that drink?”

He smiled at me and said, “Hmmm. I think I feel like a vodka and tonic. It's been so muggy all day.”

“That sounds great! You know where the vodka is. I'll dismember a lime.”

I could see him smile in my peripheral vision.

“You do that,” he said.

He filled two highball glasses with ice from the door of the refrigerator and pulled the vodka and a bottle of warm tonic from the liquor cabinet. Jonathan went about fixing our drinks, and I squeezed two wedges of lime into the glasses.

“So how was your day?” he asked.

“Awesome. Yours?”

“Two torn Achilles and a bunch of sprained wrists and ankles, but wait! I did have a chance to give an opinion on four, count them, four knee replacements! Ain't nobody on the planet who can do a knee like me!”

“Four different patients?”

“Yep! Pretty exciting, those knee replacements. Not as interesting as shoulders, but better than hips. Cheers!”

“Cheers. Would you like a little pâté?”

“Sure! So what made your day awesome?”

I walked over to the coffee table in the den and spread some pâté on a cracker and handed it to him. “I spent the day reading a biography of Josephine Pinckney.”
And I sent an e-mail to Wes telling him it was over. And a ghost made me a sandwich
.

“So Harlan made you drink the Kool-Aid too? Thanks.”

“I guess. But, heck, this was
her
house. Seems rude not to care, doesn't it?”

“You see, this is what I always loved about you.”

“What?”

“That you care. You actually honestly and truly care about other people besides yourself to the point you'd remark on how to be considerate of a woman who's been dead for how long?”

“Early 1950s.”

“That's over sixty years. Can I help myself to another?” He cut a piece of pâté and spread it on a cracker.

“Sure! Yeah, but not when you read about her life. Seems like she could just walk in here from another room, and she'd fit right in with everything in 2012.”

“A woman ahead of her time.”


Way
ahead of her time.” I stopped and watched him drain his glass. He was staring at me. “What are you looking at?”

“I'm looking at you.”

“Why? Is my mascara running?” I wiped under my eyes, but my fingers were clean. “Do I have lipstick on my teeth?”

“No, you silly girl! You're perfect. I was just thinking about messing up your hair.”

Well, here we were at the moment of truth. Harlan was right.

“Don't you dare! Do you know how long it took to blow it out?” I was playing dumb for the moment. I looked at my wristwatch. “Whoops! It's getting on to six thirty! We'd better start going, right?”

He looked at me with one of those male confident smiles that said,
I've got the hook in you, my little tuna, and I'll reel you in when I'm ready
.

“Sure, let's start moving,” he said and laughed a little.

I took the last sip of my drink and handed him my glass. Wait, wasn't it less than an hour ago that I said I wanted romance and adventure? I decided that therein lies the difference between dreams and reality. Dreams made your eyes sparkle over the possibilities of doing something new and exciting. Reality made the rest of you break a sweat in panic. I was terrified.

The restaurant host took us to our table right away, and to my surprise we were seated next to the mayor of Atlanta, Kasim Reed, sitting with Mayor Joe Riley of Charleston and six other men. I wondered what Mayor Reed was doing here. It probably had something to do with tourism. Somehow, Charleston seemed to ooze a feeling of well-being and prosperity, despite all the reports of economic reversals around the country. And there was so much to do here it boggled the mind. Perhaps most important, the city was organized around every kind of activity a tourist could want—golf, tennis, water sports, fishing, eco-tours, plantations, shopping, museums, and historical events—the list went on and on.

“What do you think he's doing here?” I said to Jonathan.

“Maybe he's just here for dinner,” he said. “The food is really great.”

“Very funny,” I said.

We ordered our meal. I was having the rutabaga soup and the tilefish, and Jonathan ordered the scallops and the fish stew.

“This calls for a hearty white or even a light red. Do you have a preference?”

Did I have a preference? When on earth was the last time someone asked me about my personal preference?

“Oh, why don't you just choose something?”

“Well, do you feel like California or Italy?”

“To be honest, I've never been to either place.”

He lowered the wine list and stared at me. “Really?”

“Yes. I know, pitiful.”

“Do you hate to fly or something?”

“Not at all. And I'd love to go to California and see the wine country and to Italy to see, well, thousands of years of history. Maybe throw a coin in a fountain, eat a bowl of pasta, ride a Vespa?”

The sommelier came over and stood at Jonathan's side waiting patiently.

“We'll have a bottle of the Luigi Ferrando,” Jonathan said.

“That sounds so great! Do you know that wine?” I said.

“Nope. I just picked the one that had a name I could pronounce.”

We had a good laugh at that. I loved that he wasn't so pretentious.

“You are so adorable,” I said.

“I'm going to whisk you away to Italy and to California too.”

“Okay. Let's go!” I giggled at the thought of it.

The sommelier returned, Jonathan gave the
Chateau Whatever He Ordered
a sniff and a sip and a nod. The sommelier poured two glasses for us. I sat back, sipping and dreaming about traveling all over Italy with Jonathan. Why, I
knew
I'd have a wonderful time! Wonderful! When had I ever said that?

“You have the funniest look on your face! What are you thinking about?”

Having crazy sex all over Italy with you.
Which I did not say. I simply said, “Oh, nothing. You know, Italy, I guess. And how much fun we might have.”

“How much fun we
will
have!” He raised his glass. “Cheers! So tell me some more about our Miss Pinckney.”

This is what I loved about Jonathan—he remembered how I had spent my day. He actually wanted to hear about it. Wes would have harrumphed and looked to Harold to discuss the Braves or some golf course he had heard about and wanted to play.

“Well, I'll tell you this much. She was predestined for infamy,” I said.

“How so?”

“To begin with, she was the very first student enrolled at Ashley Hall.”

“Your alma mater.”

“Yes. But she also started their literary magazine—she was just a young girl.”

“Why is that so unusual?”

“Well, because she stood up for what she wanted when she was merely fourteen? And later on, in only her twenties, she became a founding member of the Poetry Society of South Carolina. However, she spent the next fifteen years fighting to maintain credit for that and many other things she did. In those days, the gentlemen had a tendency to swallow up the accomplishments of the ladies.”

“Not so in today's world. At least not in my practice. And you know what? Sometimes women make better doctors, especially when the patient is a child or geriatric. Women just naturally have more compassion.”

It was a slightly sexist remark, but I ignored it. If anything, Jonathan was always well intentioned.

“I agree, but it's how it was then. Anyway, at some point she broke away from the Poetry Society and began to travel with her mother all over the place. She spent a lot of summers in Massachusetts, and she got her heart completely broken by a fellow her mother adored and was dying for her to marry. His name was Dick Wigglesworth.”

“That's some name.”

“Yes. Unfortunate. Old Boston family, he was the seventh-generation Harvard Law School graduate. His mother's brother-in-law was Oliver Wendell Holmes. I mean, we're talking about some seriously pedigreed Yankees.”

“I have to imagine there were and still are more than a
few,
” Jonathan said, laughing.

“There are scads of them, and we both know it.”

“Yes, but would our
grandparents
have admitted it?”

“In a pig's eye, honey. Anyway, she takes old Dick out . . .”

“What a curious string of words.”

“Jonathan Ray! Hush your mouth! In a
canoe
! A
canoe
! Let me rephrase! She goes for a canoe outing one day and she suggests they elope.”

“Oh, I see.”

“Please! So he said something terrible to her like
he felt unable to screw up enough enthusiasm for something so
,
so . . .
what was the term he used?
Irrevocable!
That's it!”

“Jeez. Not the most sensitive way to put it. She must've been pretty unhappy to hear about his lack of enthusiasm!”

Our appetizers arrived. “This looks delicious! Well, of course, but wait; he moved to Berlin with some government job and came out of the closet.”

“That must've been a shock.”

“I'll say, but you see, that's the whole thing. She didn't have the greatest judgment in the world when it came to men. And the parade of men was impressive in its numbers. More than a couple of them were married, and there is a long list of her short-term affairs. But the one man she was really serious about, besides Dick Wigglesworth, was Thomas Waring.”

“From the
Post and Courier
newspaper?”

“Yes. Even though he was married and they made every effort to be discreet, their love affair was pretty well known among their friends. It went on for years until he died.”

“Love affairs are
supposed
to be discreet when you're married.”

“What are you telling me?” I said, caught off balance.
Does he think we're lovers?
“Aren't we discreet?”

“Are we having a love affair?” Jonathan was now grinning all over in delight.

For whatever crazy reason I had, I decided to take the leap and be bold.

I said, “Yes, although it's kind of an Abelard and Heloise business at the moment, I'd say we are!” And then I mumbled, “Sort of.”

We both laughed then, and he leaned across the table, covering my hand with his.

“Listen, I know you're still married. I don't want to mortify you by being too forward. But I am going to tell you this. As much as I swore off any more commitments of a romantic nature years ago, I'm not letting you get away again. But I'm not in a hurry, either. You have a lot to sort out. I want to be the one you lean on.”

“Oh, Jonathan, thank you . . .”

“No. This isn't about thanks. I'm not doing you a special favor. I happen to love being with you. Just like when we were kids, I feel so great when I'm with you. And when I'm not with you, all l can think about is seeing you again. I'm like a twenty-year-old idiot! I mean it, Les. I'm going to get you through whatever you have to do to be free of Wes, and then, well, I guess we'll see how we feel. I mean, come on, so far this is pretty wonderful, isn't it?”

“Yep. It sure is.”

“And you'd come visit me in Napa, wouldn't you?”

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