This One Is Mine: A Novel (32 page)

BOOK: This One Is Mine: A Novel
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Sally jammed the needle into the little jar. Her hand shaking, she drew out ten units. She didn’t bother lifting her wedding dress. She stabbed the syringe through the satin and injected herself in the stomach. She could finally breathe. Her baby was going to be fine.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Double Secret Probation   
   The Game Show   
   Coachella

Now Do You Believe Me?   
   I Never Really Liked You

“T
EN FIVE PER EPISODE?”
V
IOLET SAID TO HER AGENT AS SHE BACKED OUT OF
the carport. Violet’s friend Richard had just gotten a pilot picked up. There was a bit of money left in the budget, and he had asked if she’d consult a couple days a week. “We can close the deal,” she told her agent. “Let me know my start date.” She hung up, tickled to be once again employed.

The night of the wedding, Violet had stayed up for David in their hotel room, bracing herself for his excoriation, but he never appeared. Instead, he had checked into his own bungalow. It was where he’d been living for the past month, coming and going from the house only to see Dot, get the mail, and drop off laundry. He was always perfectly agreeable, exchanging pleasantries with Violet, who trepidatiously followed his lead. It was as if she were on some type of double secret probation.

All Violet could do as she awaited her sentence was live her life, their life. She kept the house in order and tended to Dot. Every night, she’d snuggle in bed with her little girl and, after the books, tell her, “Mommy loves you. And Daddy loves you. And Mommy loves Daddy. And Daddy loves Mommy.”

Teddy rarely appeared in her thoughts. When he did, it was so benign — she’d read a reference to JFK and think, Oh — that Violet would smile at the utter lack of emotional charge.

However, there were some loose ends. First, she had to wiggle out of the George Harrison estate. The geology report was a disaster, which gave her an excuse to cancel the purchase. The paperwork had to be signed and delivered by five o’clock tomorrow.

The second issue was a bit more unsettling. The myriad of gifts stashed in her trunk had disappeared the night of the wedding. Violet resisted calling Teddy, not only because she didn’t want any contact with him, but because her gut said he didn’t do it. His code of honor was rife with nuance, to be sure. But burglary was something that just didn’t fit. There was the additional matter of hepatitis C. She and Teddy had used a condom. Still, she would get a blood test, just to be sure.

Violet reached the bottom of the driveway and stopped at the mailbox. Despite all of David’s success, his face would fill with childlike anticipation at the sight of the mail. She’d bring him the mail, the lunch she had made him, the escrow cancelation papers, and word of her new job. David had wanted her to start writing again. Perhaps he’d be so happy he’d sleep at home tonight. Perhaps he’d already made up his mind to throw her out. There was no way to tell. Yesterday at the market, she had reached for a dozen eggs, and realized they had a good chance of lasting longer at her house than she did.

She dialed David’s office.

“Violet!” burst the startled voice of David’s assistant.

“David’s wife.”

“I know. He was out of the office all morning, I have no idea where, and I’ve got a million people trying to get a hold of him.”

“Oh,” Violet said. “He’s not around?”

“He just got on a helicopter to Coachella. Even though the concert’s not until Saturday, he went today to make sure the sound from the main stage won’t drown out the second stage —” The assistant gasped.

“What?” asked Violet.

“Nothing,” said the girl. “I don’t know why I’m telling you all this.”

Violet had been thinking the same thing. “Well, just tell David I called.” She hung up, disappointed she would miss him.

S
ALLY
ascended the steps of her Crescent Heights apartment. Strewn on the landing was a month of mail laced with shriveled wisteria blossoms. The state seal of California jumped out at her. She opened the envelope. “Sally Miller Parry, this letter informs you that your debts have been discharged, blah, blah, blah. . . .” Could she have really gotten away with the whole thing? She was out of debt, married, and pregnant, all in four months. She gathered the mail and opened the door.

Before her was a wonderland of wedding presents, all shapes and sizes. They were just gigantic chunks of cardboard, of course, but Sally’s X-ray eyes saw the light blue Tiffany boxes, gold Geary’s ones, and more! It was as if she had opened door number two and won the grand prize. She half-expected Bob Barker to step in and hand her the keys to a brand-new convertible. The audience would lustily applaud, knowing Sally deserved it all.

She could have ripped open every box on the spot, but she had to organize her medicine before the car arrived. Game One of the NBA Conference Finals was tonight in Houston, and the plane left in two hours. Sally picked her way to the kitchen, where she loaded medicine into her extra diabetes kit for the plane. Hopefully, Houston would be more fun than Sacramento. It ended up that there was only so much you could do, or charge, at the Sheraton Grand Sacramento. She and Jeremy had ventured out once, to the California State Railroad Museum. At the ticket booth, Jeremy got recognized by a bunch of scary black people wearing Kings jerseys. They kept shouting, Hey, Professor! and taking pictures with their cell phones. The newlyweds left before the guide showed up for their VIP tour.

Sally zipped the kit shut, then couldn’t help it. She had to open just one present.

She raced into the living room and chose a giant box from Tiffany. She yanked off the red ribbon. Inside was a peacock cachepot. Sally’s spirits sank. She
had
registered for it, but what would she do with a five-hundred-dollar cachepot? Maybe start a charity where people gave away their wedding presents to those less fortunate. Sally had once read in
Town & Country
that Jessica Seinfeld, Jerry’s wife, founded a charity that distributed baby stuff that her friends didn’t want. Now that she was Sally White, she needed to start taking herself seriously like that, too.

Sally looked at the mail. Maybe there was something good
there
. She recognized a return address as belonging to Nora Ross. The envelope was heavy, the paper thick and expensive. Sally opened it and removed a little book bound with red silk cord. On the cover were the words:

Brilliant

Absentminded

Mathematically Inclined

Structured

That was a perfect description of Jeremy! This must be some kind of personalized thank-you note for the wedding. She turned the page.

Repetitive

Clumsy

Literal Minded

Socially Inept

Obsessive

Sally frowned. Sure, all those things applied to Jeremy, but they were hardly appropriate for a thank-you note. And where was the part about
her?
She turned the page.

ASPERGER’S SYNDROME

A Pervasive Developmental Disorder

that has reached

epidemic proportions.

Please join

Nora and Jordan Ross

as they Shine a Spotlight

on the Autism Spectrum.

There was a Web address on the bottom of the invitation. Sally went to her laptop and typed it in. A blare of words and phrases appeared on the screen.

Asperger’s syndrome is considered to be a lesser form of AUTISM . . .

Wait, Sally thought, J. J. has autism. Jeremy is nothing like J.J.

Asperger’s syndrome is often marked by high intelligence and a tendency to become abnormally fixated on one subject. This often results in a successful career in that field. . . .

That did describe Jeremy, but lots of people were successful.

They have trouble empathizing and reciprocating emotion. . . . Their speech often lacks inflection. . . .

Sally?
She could hear Jeremy’s flat voice as if he were right there in the room.

Many people with Asperger’s syndrome have difficulty making eye contact. . . .

Sally.

They have an unusually low tolerance of loud noises.

Sally.

They rigidly adhere to specific arbitrary rituals, any deviation from which can cause significant anxiety. . . . Despite their intelligence, everyday activities such as driving a car can seem impossibly complicated. . . .

Sally!

Asperger’s is highly hereditary. One in three girls born to a parent with Asperger’s will inherit it. Double that with boys.

Sally grabbed her stomach and closed her eyes. Jeremy’s horrible voice echoed in her brain.
Sally. Sally. Sally.

“Stop it!” She covered her ears.

“Sally. The car is waiting.” She turned. Instead of Bob Barker standing among the boxes, it was Jeremy. “Sally,” he said, “it’s time to go.”

“Jeremy. Is something wrong with you?”

“No.”

“Why do you always wear earplugs?” Sally had never even asked him this, always having attributed it to the delightful eccentricity of a genius.

“Do you want some?” He reached into his pocket and offered her a pair. She hit them to the floor.

“Look at me,” she said. He flashed her a glance, then looked down. “Look me in the eyes.” She stepped toward him. He didn’t look up. “What is wrong with you?”

“Our plane leaves at twelve fifty and it’s eleven now. The driver said there’s lots of traffic.”

“Why don’t you drive?”

“I don’t have a license,” he said.

“Have you ever tried to get one?”

“Six times.”

“What happened?” Her voice trembled.

“It didn’t work out.”


What
didn’t work out?”

“I scored a hundred on the written, but I didn’t like the driving portion.”

“Don’t you think it’s weird,” she said, “that you got your PhD in a week, but you can’t drive a car?”

“I got my PhD in five semesters.”

Then it occurred to her. “That’s why you pooped that day. You can look into a
camera
just fine. But when it came time to look into Jim’s
eyes,
you got so nervous, you shit your pants!”

Sally had played everything right. The dating, the proposal, the pregnancy, the wedding. The one thing she had overlooked was that Jeremy was retarded. And chances were, the baby in her belly was, too.

“Go,” she said. “Go to Houston by yourself.”

“You have a plane ticket.”

“Get out!” Sally said. Jeremy turned and walked out of the apartment.

T
HE
helicopter began its descent. David stared out the window. The Coachella Valley looked as if someone had begun to methodically stick postage stamps in different shades of green to the desert floor, only to abandon the task halfway through. He could make out the festival site up ahead, its monster main stage and dozen white tents scattered on the hyper-green polo field. David’s BlackBerry vibrated. There it was.

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