Why Men Lie (18 page)

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Authors: Linden MacIntyre

BOOK: Why Men Lie
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“So when did you twig?”

“When he joined the gym.”

JC laughed. “Ah yes. The gym.”

“You all knew?”

He nodded.

And maybe she’d known too, long before she first admitted it. The thing about knowledge is that you can have it without knowing what it is. Wilful ignorance, they call it.

“So what was the final clue?” JC asked.

“There was no final clue. I just felt something. I don’t know how long I felt it before I put a name to it.”

Except for the gym, nothing about him had changed. He was attentive and consistent in his moods. Loved their child and doted on her. Shared his work frustrations, which were mostly minor. She told herself it was loneliness that made her look for him one evening. Not an actual surveillance, really, but more a yearning to be close. She went to the gym wearing her happiest face. She told the girl at the front desk that she was supposed to meet her husband there. He was a member.

The girl checked. “Ah yes. Mr. Gillis.” But he wasn’t there that evening.

There was a little office that she hadn’t noticed, and a man standing in the doorway. He seemed to sense distress. He was the owner-manager, he said. How could he help?

Oh, not at all. She’d hoped to meet her husband there, but there had clearly been a mix-up.

“His name?”

“Sextus Gillis.”

He picked up a small box of file cards from the desk, walked his fingers through them. “Sextus. Gillis. Now there’s an interesting name. It doesn’t ring a bell, but … ah, there it is. And what would your name be? I’m Conor Ferguson.”

She hesitated. And then said, “You can call me Faye. Faye Gillis.”

“Ah, Faye,” he said. “Lovely.”

He held out a hand. It was a soft hand, like the rest of him, like the accent with the slight uptick at the end of sentences, like the smile. He was slightly shorter than she was, and he had a paunch
that was exaggerated by a turtleneck sweater that was half a size too small. His hair was unruly and thinning at the front, curling around his ears and collar. But his eyes were the feature she remembered later. They were blue and businesslike, almost cold in contrast to the warmth that seemed to radiate from the rest of him. The eyes were managerial. The rest of him, the body and the manner, spoke of service.

“Here’s my card,” he said. “If you ever consider gettin’ into shape yourself. Maybe a little cardio for the long haul.”

“Cardio” with the stone-hard
r
and the soft, soft uptick
o
.

She smiled. “The heart’s in pretty solid shape already.”

“Ah, of that I’m sure,” he said. “But then again, the heart is full of little secrets.”

“You’re Irish.”

He hesitated. “In a manner of speakin’. Yes.”

A week later she called and asked if he would meet her at a coffee shop across the street from the gym. She wanted to talk about fitness, the possibility of a personalized training plan.

She got there early, found a discreet table near a window.

After some brief discussion, he asked her what was really on her mind.

“I want to know whether or not my husband
ever
goes to your gym, Mr. Ferguson. Frankly, I think he’s using it as a front for something else.”

He pursed his lips, raised the coffee cup, looked intently at her across the rim. “I really wouldn’t know anythin’ about that,” he said. “Actually, I have three gyms in the city.”

“He said he goes to this one.”

“You don’t say.” He sipped. Sighed. “You think he’s cheatin’?”

She wasn’t really ready for the question. She was silent.

“All I can say truthfully, and respectin’ people’s privacy, is that I know all my regulars. I’m sorry to say I don’t know yer man.”

“Thank you,” she said.

The feeling wasn’t unfamiliar, the emotional void that suddenly surrounded her. But she surprised herself. She felt no pain. And though she was in a strange city, among strangers, she was unafraid. She felt a mild humiliation, but it was offset by the sense of power that comes from secret knowledge, the measure of control it gives. And there was Conor. He was easy to be with. He was a private place where she could go to hide, to fantasize. They didn’t talk about the reason they got to know each other in the first place. He never tried to take advantage of what he might correctly have assumed to be a period of vulnerability. Hard to believe, after knowing Sextus, who saw vulnerability as opportunity. Conor was gentle in his manners, but there was a directness in his speech, even in the way he looked at her. The conversations over coffee grew longer and more frequent. He had a deep knowledge of his country’s folklore and seemed fascinated that she could speak a language in which so much of his mythology was rooted. He’d grown up in a place she’d never heard of. Armagh.

Their growing friendship was enriched by irony. He should have been Sextus’s friend, another part of the diverse band of strangers Sextus frequently brought home, usually unannounced. Conor and Sextus would have got on famously, for a while, at least. Sextus knew about the world, about its afflictions. He knew the history of the troubles in the north of Ireland, the Catholics and Protestants and all their animosities. They both
loved alcohol, and both seemed to have a remarkable capacity for controlling its effects.

The closest thing to intimacy in those early days was in one brief, impulsive moment when she touched Conor’s hand and declared, “I’m glad you’re here to listen … it’s a comfort.”

He blushed and turned away. “Ah well,” he said. Then, “Thanks for sayin’ that.”

When they were parting that day, he hugged her briefly, his face close to hers. On her temple she felt the whisper of a kiss. But still she told herself their bond was virtuous, and it gave her moral confidence.

She’d pretend to be asleep.

Sextus would ask softly, “You awake?”

She’d feign a murmur. “No.” Then, “Your hair is wet.”

“I showered at the gym … didn’t want to wake you.”

“Good night.”

“Good night.”

And she’d lie there in the void, composing the rough draft of what she knew would be her future.

The causeway was in shadow when she crossed, the sun already tucking in behind the mainland. But the light still caught the Creignish hills and flickered on the bay, dancing on the northern reaches of the Strait of Canso. It was July 5, but there was a chill. She noted with dismay that Cape Porcupine, once a looming barricade against the world, now seemed to have become a gravel pit. Had it really been so totally diminished, torn apart and humbled for the sake of a few demeaning local jobs and fat profits for the
owners of some foreign corporation? Or was it ever quite the eminence she remembered from long, dull days of staring at it through a schoolhouse window?

Cape Porcupine resembled an environmental crime scene. A noble mountain, turned into a quarry, hacked and torn apart and, as far as she could tell, unlamented by any local individual or group. She made a mental note: JC should bring a crew down, frighten local politicians and their corporate accomplices with the spectre of exposure on national television. Wake people up.

She carried on to town, bought provisions. Bread, milk, tea, cereal. A box of fried chicken would simplify the arrival at the old house on the Long Stretch. She realized that she was stalling. Her anticipation was underscored by dread with hints of sadness. JC would have been a brand-new factor in the going-home equation.

She stopped at the gate, unlocked it, swung it wide, propped it open with a stick. The grass was tall and thick with hardy weeds. Farther along the road, through the grove of poplars that obscured the Gillis place, she could see a glow of light. She wondered briefly what it looked like now.

Over the years, she and Duncan had, quite independently, transformed their old place. There was vinyl siding, a hefty propane tank, new windows all around. New doors. New wiring with a 200-amp service panel. There was even a dishwasher, of which Duncan disapproved. She had hired a contractor to bulldoze what was left of the old barn. Duncan hadn’t commented.

She hesitated only briefly.

“Daddy?”

“What are you doing, hiding in there? Let me see you.”

The kitchen was now ablaze with light, her suitcase near the door, bags of groceries on the kitchen counter. The stereo blared in what had been her bedroom and was now her office.
Chiquitita, tell me what’s wrong …

She once dared JC to confess his greatest flaw. He hesitated for a moment. “I love ABBA,” he said finally.

“Oh … my … God,” she replied.

“What’s wrong with ABBA?”

You’re enchained by your own sorrow / In your eyes there’s no hope for tomorrow
. She walked to the door of the office, pointed the remote toward the stereo, turned it off. Poured a drink and sat at the kitchen table.

Conor had warned her to be ready. The movies lead us to anticipate a dramatic buildup, background music to prepare us for the shock. But there never
is
background music, just the normal sounds. In retrospect, they always seem banal. And the end is always bitter
.

When the moment came, the soundtrack was from the television, the hollow chatter of a quiz show about stories in the news. They always watched it. An old man was struggling in the middle of a long question. Cassie was in bed. The dishes were washed and in the cupboard. His late nights had become ludicrously later. Last night it had been near three a.m. But now he was home, looking pale, struggling to stay awake. She’d had enough
.

She heard the words, much as he did, as if someone else was speaking them
.

“One of us is going to have to do something,” she said without looking at him
.

“Do what?” he said wearily. Then he stood, walked to the television
set and turned up the sound. When he turned back, he smiled at her, then came and sat beside her. Squeezed her knee
.

“I want you to move out for a while,” she said
.

“What?”

“You heard me.”

“Where’s this coming from?”

She sighed. “I don’t want to have to spell it out. I just want you to go away for a while so I can think.”

“Go away where?”

“That’s up to you. I suspect …” For a moment her voice was gone, and she could feel the pressure of tears. She took a deep breath. “I’m talking about a trial separation,” she said
.

“Separation …”

“Like the Trudeaus.”

“The Trudeaus! Give me a friggin’ break.”

“I need time. You can decide when—”

“When!” he shouted. “When? How about right fucking now.”

The door slammed. She knew that the child’s eyes had briefly opened, the bony little body stirred, hand found face, thumb found mouth. Effie held her breath. Silence broken only by a spatter of applause and people talking in a television box, oblivious behind a television window
.

The next day, at the coffee shop across from Conor’s Gym, she told him, “He left last night.”

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