This Is Not Over Part 24
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"I don't trust her," I tell Larry. "She's too young, for one thing."
"That's in the plus column, in my book. She's full of energy. It's amazing, her success in such a short time."
"We didn't see her failures. The houses she overpriced and couldn't sell."
"You saw the link I sent you, right? I did my research. What do you take me for?"
I'm not sure if that was a dig about the foundation work estimate or not. I choose to think not.
"Who recommended her," I ask, "Peter?" He nods. "I'm pretty sure he's sleeping with her. She's just his type." Peter's conquests are legendary. His wife is a mousy old thing who stayed home raising their children, and the criteria for his girlfriends are that they're pre-thirty and ambitious.
Larry waves a hand dismissively, but he doesn't actually deny it. "She knows her stuff. She's got a vision, and a h.e.l.l of an impressive track record already. Let's go with her."
"We haven't decided we're going with anyone. Have we?"
He squinches his face. It's clear that we-as in, he-have already decided.
No more defense. I'm going to need to go on the offensive, if I want to save all I have.
Nice hasn't gotten me anywhere in life. I don't have the respect of my son or my husband. I'm dealing with people who are capable of anything, and I have to be, too. They're soulless; I'll be heartless. After all, Thad's already ripped mine clean out of my chest.
39.
Dawn
Thanks for the refund. Better late than never, I guess. And while I appreciate your epiphany, I'm standing by my reviews. You did what you did, and you can't undo it now. We all have to sit with the consequences of our actions, no matter the size of our bank accounts or our houses or who we married.
I delete everything after "actions" and send the text. It's not nearly as satisfying as I would have hoped. Sure, I'm an irritant, a pebble in Miranda's shoe, but we're still worlds apart. For example, I'm about to go fis.h.i.+ng in the bathtub drain with an unspooled wire hanger, and she's got people for tasks like this. No review I post can change that.
But she's also got Thad. And, in my way, so do I. It's just a question of what to do with him.
After a few probes with the metal formerly known as a hanger, I remove the dangling hair clot and carry it over to the trash can. This cannot seriously be my life.
Sure, I do most household tasks since Rob works more hours than I attend cla.s.s, and he brings home the bacon; it's only fair. But he should be able to wipe up Doritos crumbs, and his own urine from the rim of the toilet. I feel like he's on some pa.s.sive-aggressive trip. He got home after ten on Sat.u.r.day night, claimed he had lots of engraving to do, and he didn't send a single text, day or night. He was probably waiting on one from me, something sweet, telling him I couldn't wait to see him. Well, I'm not feeling so sweet lately.
I don't even get what his problem is. Is it that I have my own mind and feelings and past, and I won't jump at his every suggestion? Why is he so eager to get me out of town to visit my mother anyway? It would be the ultimate irony if my straight-arrow husband had someone on the side.
No, despite everything, I know he wouldn't do that. It's just that something's changed between us, and I don't know if it's him or me. My dad's death is killing my marriage.
Another text from Thad, saying nothing. Well, he's saying something. He's saying, "Waah, I'm insecure."
What part of "don't call me, I'll call you" does he not understand?
Still, it's harder than I would have expected to ignore him. I don't miss Rob, exactly, but I do kind of miss Thad.
I take a quick shower, get dressed, and head for campus. Professor Myerson told me to stop by his office before cla.s.s, and some part of me is sure it's bad news. I feel the hot breath of graduation on my neck.
If finally getting my bachelor's degree doesn't create a sense of pride and excitement, would having a baby? What if it didn't? Sometimes having a child just seems like Russian roulette. You could get Rob, or you could get Thad. You could have a bullet lodged in your brain for years on end. Years without end.
I wait outside Professor Myerson's door while he finishes up with another student. My phone pings another incoming text.
Don't freeze me out, Dawn.
Oh, shut up.
Real mature.
Like it's real mature to say "real mature."
This is what you do, Dawn. It's your m.o. You get too close, and then you disappear. You don't want anyone to really know you. I'm not going to let you get away with it.
You don't know me, or my m.o.
Exactly my point.
This is pointless.
I don't want to be clever with you. Let me in.
No. Stay out. Where's my skull and crossbones emoji?
Does your husband let you get away with this s.h.i.+t? Is that why you stay with him?
I'm not going to answer that. I shouldn't have answered him at all.
See, now you're going to run away. You're too good for that.
See, he really doesn't know me at all.
Finally, Professor Myerson ushers me into his office. If possible, there seems to be even more paper and less s.p.a.ce than last time.
"I've been thinking about your conundrum," he says, "and I think I've got something for you."
It's the last thing I expected to hear. In our previous meeting, he slipped out the back door rather than continue our conversation. Not that this broom closet has a back door. This office does not engender hope, frankly. It reminds me how third-tier my school really is.
"I can get you an interview with a VP at Whaley-Barnum." He's practically oozing self-satisfaction.
"The pharmaceutical company?" I tell him I want an ethical job that pays and he comes up with Big Pharma?
He nods, still looking all puffed up. "You'd be part of a program to combat the misunderstandings about vaccines. Measles has made a comeback, and potentially deadly diseases could do the same. So you'd be on the front lines, so to speak. You'd be trying to reach all the parents who believe, without any real scientific evidence, that vaccinations could cause autism and other problems."
"I'd be communicating about something that really matters," I say. I want to smile, but I'm afraid. It seems too good to be true.
"Exactly."
"And making real money to boot."
His grin broadens. "Exactly. I've already talked you up to the VP. All you need to do is get me your resume, I'll pa.s.s it along, and he'll schedule the interview."
"You really think I've got a shot at this?"
"You've got a great shot. I told him all about you."
Now I am smiling, bigger than I have in I don't know how long. "You don't know what this means to me. I've been so stressed out. Thank you so, so much!" I'd like to hug him but I don't want to give him the wrong idea. I'd hate to learn that there's a catch.
"You're very welcome." He stands up, glancing at his watch. I love this guy. Who actually wears a watch anymore? "Let's get to cla.s.s."
I nearly dance out of the office, with Professor Myerson by my side.
A few minutes ago, I was afraid it was all over for me. Now I feel like it's just beginning.
40.
Miranda
It was so good to meet you, Miranda! Just let me know if I can answer any questions for you. I've got a million ideas about your house. Really, I can think about nothing else. I'd make you my first priority.
Kimberly Larry and I made it through a dinner of takeout Thai food without talking about Kimberly Zhou, though that meant we were nearly silent. Neither of us wanted to broach such an incendiary topic.
Larry and I have always had a very civil marriage. It was modeled by my parents, while Larry's parents ill.u.s.trated the opposite. They used to have knock-down-drag-outs every few days, to hear him tell it. In contrast and sometimes through great effort (and fraught silence, like tonight), we've created a peaceful home. I think that's to our credit, given the strain of Thad's problems. A family member's addiction is a series of earthquakes, and marriages built on a fault line don't survive. Nar-Anon has certainly taught me that.
Larry scoops up one last mouthful of tofu and vegetables. "That hit the spot."
I was mostly pus.h.i.+ng the food around my plate, too nervous to eat. I've lost five pounds over the past few weeks. "Do you want any dessert?"
He shakes his head, his expression turning grave. "You know we need to talk, right?"
"I'm afraid so." I try to smile.
"Selling's the only thing that makes sense. You must realize that."
"The market keeps going up. We could call Kimberly in a year." I'm fighting to sound as reasonable as he does.
He shakes his head again. "The bubble could pop, and Kimberly is excited now. She wants to take this on. Who knows how she'll feel in a year?"
"She'll feel like she can get five million."
"There are no guarantees."
"Right. She might not be able to get us the price she says she can. So why not let the house keep appreciating?" My reasonable tone is fast becoming whiny. I need to hold my own. Be a grown-up. "Larry, I want to keep the house."
"Why? You said yourself that you're tired of handling the rentals."
"It's not that."
"Then what is it?"
I'm trapping myself already. I'm not as good with words as other people. Larry, or even Dawn. What's she doing in this conversation? Rats and muddy shoes, that's what. They haven't been far from my thoughts, nor has Thad's blackmail. "I want to do a long-term rental. I'm not ready to let go of the house yet."
"It's just a house. It's not your father."
I flinch.
He extends his arm, like an olive branch. His fingers caress mine. I want to pull my hand away. He has no compa.s.sion, he's just learned the mannerisms. This is what he does with his patients. "What I mean is, all your memories will still be yours, whether we keep the house or not. It isn't going to bring him back."
"I never said it was. I thought it might bring us forward. You and me. That we could retire there."
He looks at me with astonishment. "Retire ten miles away?"
"It's a whole different way of life. You saw what it did for my father. He was like a new man. My parents were the best I'd ever seen them."
"You think it'll do that for us?" It's almost like he pities my naivete.
"I'd hoped."
"We don't need to grow closer. I'm not the workaholic your father was." Only he's more like my father than he realizes.
I want to tell him it's not about his work, or about that California king bed, or the vacations I have to mandate, and maybe it's not even about Thad, not entirely. I don't have the words, just the feeling, but that feeling is strong. Something's not right with us. The house that is my life has dry rot; the foundation can't hold. I want to think Dawn is the dry rot. If I rid myself of her, once and for all, by whatever means necessary . . .
"I'm never going to want to retire to that house," Larry says. His tone is gentle, but it feels brutal nonetheless. "So if that's the sticking point, let's get unstuck."
"You haven't truly considered it! You're just dismissing the idea out of hand, like you do with all my ideas."
He gives my finger an extra placating stroke. "Don't get frustrated."
This Is Not Over Part 24
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This Is Not Over Part 24 summary
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