The Sun in Your Eyes (30 page)

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Authors: Deborah Shapiro

BOOK: The Sun in Your Eyes
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The package arrived on
a Saturday a few weeks ago, and went in a pile that Andy placed on the table in the front hall. We have a front hall now, with a narrow window running the length of the front door, throwing a rectangle of sunlight on the floor, on a pair of little shoes. We have a jacaranda tree shedding purple flowers in our yard. We have a yard. We have a son, who pulled the padded envelope down and said, “mail darf” as he struggled in vain to open it.

“Maildarf,” said Andy. “The parcel service of Middle Earth.”

“Dada,” said Leo, handing it to Andy.

“Can you take that over to Mama?” Andy asked. “Then I'll take you to the park.”

“Mama,” said Leo.

On the front was my name written in Lee's hand, with an Austin, Texas, postmark, no return address. It had been more than two years since I'd heard anything from her. When she came back to New York following the confrontation with her mother, we met up for dinner, though only after repeated attempts on my part to pin down a time and place. Already again, she was not quite contrite enough, and I was mildly aggrieved. But that disappeared when she showed up steadied by the kind of calm that a beta-blocking agent or benzodiazepine
provides. That calm was reinforced over the course of the evening by several glasses of Malbec that I matched with mineral water. She told me what had happened with Linda. I asked what she was going to do. She'd already quit her job. There was no way she could keep working for her.
No, I meant, was she going to go to the police?
She didn't think so. Marion never had. What good would it do anybody now, Linda serving out a sentence, if it even came to that? The law seemed so far removed from what had happened—inadequate in a sense. Lee wasn't sure what was next. She thought she might travel for a while.
Still,
I thought.
Still, after everything. To be someone who can just quit a job and go traveling with no fixed return.
I envied her. That was as much as I knew.

The envelope contained a CD (“How old school,” said Andy.) and a note for me. I knew, of course, what it must be and passed the disc to Andy. But I kept the note in my hand, not wanting to open it just yet. Some instinct told me I ought to be alone to read it. Whatever it contained belonged only to me, or someone I used to be.

“Should we play it?” Andy asked.

“You guys are all ready to go. Let's play it when you get back.”

“The suspense isn't going to kill you?”

“I don't know. Maybe it'll be anticlimactic.”

“Yeah. After all this time.”

“But Flintwick always said it was really good. Music is the one thing you could trust him about. Marion also said it was great.”

I felt I should stop talking, that Lee and Linda and Jesse, the Parrish Wests, were like an ex that you could bring up every once in a while, just enough to stoke a healthy jealousy, but no more. I had to have my limits.

“You guys go. I really have to get this stuff done. So we'll just listen to it tonight.”

“Okay. Don't work too hard. We'll see you later.”

I'm writing at all hours now for a new set of characters in a different town. Verona Crossing, Wisconsin, is located somewhere between Milwaukee and Chicago. Verona Crossing is populated with its own magnates, supermodels, law enforcement agents, restaurateurs, and a disgraced mayor currently having a second act as a highly regarded cocktail mixologist. When word of THATH's cancellation had come, Frank received an offer to work for one of the remaining L.A. soaps and suggested I go with him. “There's nothing for us here,” he said of New York, as though it were time to leave the barren farm and hop a boxcar to a Hooverville. We had all seen the end coming. Andy thought we should do it. Pick up stakes, start again. His prospects were fine (“They have the Internet there.”) and the change, he believed, would be good for us, for our family.

I want to compare it to a broken bone, what happened with Rodgers and coming clean with Andy. There had been a fracture and then I made the break complete. It could be fixed, it would heal, but we would have to immobilize it, work around it, learn to use other parts of our bodies in new ways. We would be able to walk again, and eventually there might not even be a limp. But still. There was a night, the end of a night, when I heard him come home to our apartment. I didn't know where he'd been. He must have sat in the dark, in the living room, for an hour before he came into our room, just as it was getting light out. I wasn't showing yet but I was already rounder, fuller. There was more of me in the bed. He lay down and put his body against mine, as if to make a seal between us. I wrapped his arms around me. There wasn't one moment:
I forgive you now.
I had hurt him, hurt us, and that never went away. It took root, but it didn't—allow me to switch metaphors—overrun or edge out everything else that could flourish between us.

Soon after we settled in to a home in Highland Park, Linda got in touch and invited me to lunch. I considered saying no out of loyalty to Lee and respect for her feelings. But I didn't know what Lee's feelings were—she was gone from my life again. What surprised me was how infrequently I thought about her. It wasn't an even exchange, Leo taking Lee's place in a trio. I only registered the similarity of their names months after Leo was born. If Andy did, he didn't say anything—we'd named him for Andy's grandfather. But Leo's presence demagnetized me to Lee's old pull, which isn't to say I didn't welcome the temporary quiet now, the shutting of the door, being left with Lee's letter. It's just to say I didn't miss her. Not like I used to. When I did things, I didn't wonder what Lee would think, whether she would approve. I went to see Linda not because she was a link to Lee, not because they were made out of the same stardust and I wanted to be in a haze of it once more. I decided to see Linda because while I had been so naïve so often, I knew what knowing Linda West could do for me out here. That long-ago night—the redwood deck, the pool, the movie director.

“Oh, Viv!” she gasped, clutching my shoulders, hands like hen claws. “You look
won
derful!”

“Breastfeeding,” I exclaimed, matching her excitement. “It's the best diet ever.”

“Yes, I have a dim memory of that.” She pulled me in for a hug while the host, whom she called by name, patiently gave us a moment before leading us to our table—a slab of salvaged wood by a window of reclaimed glass. “You know, I did nurse Lee. For a little while anyway. Not that I'd ever get any credit for it.” She raised her hands, palms toward me, as though surrendering to a judgment, a move I'd never seen her make. “So how is motherhood treating you?”

It was
won
derful,
I said. Then she gave me her “Okay, for real, tell
me, girlfriend” face. I quickly confessed to her how hard it had been, how unrelenting, especially at first. Sobbing in the shower, wondering how I would ever manage to leave the house again but not in an active, purposeful way, more in a mystified way:
I used to leave the house?
It was cold outside, a dirty New York winter. My body hurt. I wanted to convalesce. I had heard people say things like, “Parenthood is brutal but totally worth it.” They made it sound like a particularly challenging workout and not like you had plunged to the bottom of a lake and grown gills and that the world beyond the watery light of the surface was no longer yours.

My maternity leave began just a few weeks before THATH's cancellation came down, so I had no work to return to, no old, familiar structure. I read a lot of essays written by women who hated playgrounds. I worried that my love was not unconditional. I worried that I worried. But then my heart would leap as I watched my son sleeping. It would somersault when I sat him in my lap and patted his back to burp him, which he met with a calm but alert look, like a curious sightseer, with his arms out and folded over each other like a genie. He broke my heart when he rested his little hand on my waist as I nursed him and when his cry grew faint, exhausted and trembling. Sometimes he looked like a turtle. Once, squinting and full-cheeked, he looked like Wallace Shawn. And when he smiled at me as if I lit up his whole world, it lit up mine.

I thought I had read enough baby-preparation books and seen enough diaper commercials to know what to expect: joy, aggravation, aggravated joy, joyous aggravation, lots of complaining about never having sex but not really caring because you were so tired and all you really wanted to do with that time was order takeout and watch TV. I expected to be changed in profound ways, though I didn't know what that would necessarily involve because these changes seemed
to be so profound they rendered language inadequate. But I thought they would have to do with me and the baby, not me and Andy. If anything, they would exclude Andy and that's why we would have to remember to “prioritize our relationship” and I would have to remind myself that I was “not just a mom, but a woman!”

I hadn't expected mystery. Andy and I became mysterious to each other in a way I don't think we'd been since that very first time I'd heard his voice on the phone when I called about the room. I would watch him standing by the window holding our son and think of him as someone I wanted to get to know. I would wonder about him. A wonder that led to a want that lifted a spell. As though part of me had been asleep.

Somehow there was more space with three of us. It's too simple to say that this new space we found was where Lee used to be. But her absence could be as defining as her presence. It reminded me of that day I ran into Kirsten, on my own. How sure of herself she was with Lee out of the picture, this girl who had called us a planet and herself an ant. It also made me think of the way Frank had once swiftly absolved a character of insidious actions by attributing them to a brain tumor that merely had to be removed. Lee wasn't a brain tumor and I couldn't blame her for my being unfaithful to Andy. Nor could I simply excise the infidelity by not contacting Rodgers again. For a while, he became a kind of fantasy. I thought about him too much. I didn't go places he was bound to be, but on occasions where there might be some chance, however slight, of running into him, I made sure I looked good. On days when I just happened to look particularly good (pregnancy worked for me), days when Andy would compliment me, I regretted that I never ran into Rodgers. I didn't even try to reach out to Lee to talk about it. Instead I confided in new friends, women who had told me about similar confusions in
their own lives and had trusted me to react sympathetically. Who understood fallibility. It wasn't Lee's fault. But she was a big part of it. Just as she had been a part of something for Andy that excluded me. Their attachment didn't involve me, and then it did, and I had to be there in order to be left out. I could get lost in the paradoxes. But maybe it wasn't that complicated. The old triangle fell apart. Andy and I created a new one.

I didn't tell Linda about the mystery, the wonder, the want. I took out my phone to show her a recent video of Leo, just under a year old then, laughing, and I could see her trying not to look bored. So I changed the subject.

We talked about her work. She had pulled back from the business and was considering selling the brand to a French conglomerate. We talked about L.A.
“This is where you need to be!”
She was excited for me, eager to help. This is how Linda enchanted you. How Lee did, too, in a quieter, steadier way. Their encouragement, their belief in you. It meant that you were unique, as special as they were, and you mattered. Linda had always treated me this way, and it felt generous, never strained. Until now. Now that she knew that I knew what she'd done. And what might I do with that knowledge? Obviously I'd done nothing with it yet. So what could she do for me to keep it that way? She didn't say this; she didn't have to. I suppose I could finally read between the lines. And maybe there had been something in it for her all along, an advantage in being kind to me.

“Have you heard from Lee lately?” Linda asked.

“No.”

“Would you tell me if you had?”

“You'd probably get it out of me.”

“Yes. I probably would.”

Six months have passed since then, busy months in which I haven't
taken Linda up on any favors, but not because I've declined on principle. I'm keeping her in reserve. I'm sure there will come a time when I'll need her, sooner rather than later, and more than once I've thought about something Flintwick said—how Jesse would never get his hands dirty. How that was the difference between him and Jesse, between Jesse and Linda. It was the difference between Lee and me. I had thought, hoped really, when we first became friends, that Lee might corrupt me. But I'd been wrong about who she was, and probably about who I was. Within her there was always something that wouldn't be compromised, that wasn't corrupt and wasn't corrupting. I'm sure she didn't think so, but it was true. As soon as Andy left with Leo, I sat down and read her note.

Dear Viv,

I've forgotten how to write a letter. You were right, as usual, about not hearing from me. I'm sorry it's been so long. I can't believe I haven't met Leo. I like that name. I like thinking of your son as a lionhearted boy. I hope you're doing well and I hope you're very happy in L.A.

So, guess what turned up? I stopped looking after all of that with Linda. But the short story is that a middle-aged divorcée in Minneapolis moved into a new house, a house where Chris Valenti used to live, and found the tapes in a box up in the attic. She had a yard sale and this guy, a reel-to-reel recording enthusiast, happens to see them next to a pile of old dishes, takes them home, and actually knows what it is he's listening to. He gets in touch with Charlie Flintwick, who gets in touch with me. Flintwick wants to remaster and release them. Linda says it's up to me. Yes, I've talked to her. Legally, it's up to her. But obviously legality never troubled her much. It's strange, though, because when she put it to me, when she said it was my choice, I thought at first that she was handing me a
responsibility, the way she had given me a job. Like it might make me feel I was a part of things, but that ultimately she was merely delegating. Only she wasn't. She told me this was mine in a way that made it feel like an act of restitution. For so long I'd been telling myself that there couldn't really be any restitution because nothing was taken from me, nothing I ever really had. But I don't think that's true now. Because this does feel like mine. And if it's mine, it's yours too. And it's Andy's. When I think about it, maybe it really belongs to Andy more than anyone else.

Some of the songs, you'll hear it, are kind of ragged. In a good way. I don't know if Jesse was able to get out exactly what he heard in his head. What I know is I don't have to try to understand it, it just wraps itself around you, all of that feeling. There's something familiar about it. Not that they sound just like his other songs. But it's more like they are a memory I didn't know I had. If that makes any sense. I'm glad they're here, these songs. I feel like they're on my side.

Linda told me she saw you when we spoke on the phone. I'm not upset. Not really. I'm sure Linda can help you out there. I don't mean that it was mercenary of you or anything. I know you're not me and you don't have to feel about her whatever way I do. I don't even know how I feel about her these days.

I should sign off, let you go listen and let my father have the last word. But, fuck it, call me selfish and sentimental, I want the last word. I don't have trouble meeting people. I meet them all the time and they usually want to know me. Or they think they do. I still have this ebb-and-flow thing with Jack, if you can believe it. (It has dawned on me that he is my Roy). I have friends, people who matter to me, but none of them matter the way that you did. When we were at Marion's that time, I had this thought that I could just stay there with her and never leave. An implausible scenario—impossible—but it became a feeling that was so real to me. It happens a lot—these
feelings that have no form to take, no outlet, not even a name. What do you do with those feelings? Where do they go? I know I shouldn't dwell on them, and I try not to, but sometimes when I have no particular place to be and the sun is shining, I just drive and drive because I love what it reminds me of.

Lee

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