Chapter Eight #2
Ruby laughed drily and got to her feet, moving toward Nora.
“We weren’t your whole world the summer I was sixteen; that was the year you walked into the living room, dropped your suitcase on the floor, and announced that you were leaving, wasn’t it?
And what was it you said to us—‘Who wants to come with me?’ Yes, that was it.
‘Who wants to come with me?’ As if Caroline and I would set down our forks, clear the table, and move away from our dad and our home just because you decided you didn’t want to be here. ”
“I didn’t decide . . . I left because—”
“I don’t care why you left. That’s what you care about.”
Nora longed to make Ruby understand, even if it was only the merest bit. Just enough so that they could simply talk. “You don’t know everything about me.”
Ruby looked down at her. Nora thought she saw a war going on inside her daughter, as if Ruby wanted both to keep fighting and to stop.
It surprised Nora. She understood why her daughter would want to keep distance between them.
What she couldn’t imagine was why Ruby was still standing here.
It was, in truth, a little disconcerting.
She got the unsettling feeling that Ruby—honest-to-a-fault Ruby—was hiding something.
“Tell me something about you, then,” Ruby said at last.
This was Nora’s chance. She knew she needed to tread carefully. “Okay, let’s go sit on the porch—like we used to, remember? We’ll each share one piece of information about ourselves.”
Ruby laughed. “I asked you to tell me about you. I didn’t offer to reciprocate.”
Nora stood her ground. “I need to know about you, too. Besides, if we’re both talking, we can pretend it’s a conversation.”
Ruby wasn’t laughing now. “Very Silence of the Lambs of you, Nora. Quid pro quo. For every secret you tell me, I tell you one.”
“I suppose I’m Hannibal Lecter in your little comparison. A cannibal . . . and a psychopath, how lovely.”
Ruby studied her a minute longer. “This should be interesting. I’m twenty-seven; you were fifty . . . when, the day before yesterday? I guess it’s time we talked. Come on.”
She watched her daughter walk through the kitchen and disappear onto the porch. The screen door banged shut behind her. Nora finally allowed herself to smile.
Ruby had remembered her birthday.
Finally, she wheeled out onto the porch, thankful to see that the rain had stopped.
Cool night air breezed across her cheeks, carrying with it the smells of a life gone by—the sea, the sand, the roses climbing along the railings.
They had bloomed early this year, as they always did after a mild winter.
In another two weeks there would be saucer-size blossoms crawling up the trellises and along the picket fence.
Shadows crept along the ground like slowly seeping India ink, moved up the sides of the house, and slipped through the slats on the picket fence. Sunset tinted the sky purple and pink.
The porch light cast Ruby’s back in an orangey glow. She looked young and vulnerable, with her black hair so poorly cut, and her clothes all tattered and torn. The urge to reach out, to brush the hair off Ruby’s face, and say softly—
“Don’t say it, Nora.”
Nora frowned. “Say what?”
“‘Ah, Ruby, you could be so beautiful if you’d just try a little.’”
It startled Nora, that bit of mind reading.
Sure, she’d said that often to Ruby, had thought in fact to say it a second ago, but it meant nothing.
To Nora, the comment had simply been grains of sand in the desert of a mother’s advice.
Obviously, Ruby had felt otherwise, and she’d carried the words with her into womanhood.
Nora saw how heavy they had become, and she was ashamed. “I’m sorry, Ruby. What I should have said is: you’re beautiful, just the way you are.”
Ruby turned, stared down at her.
Silence settled between them, broken only by the sounds of the sea and the occasional caw of a lone crow hidden in the trees.
“Okay, Nora,” Ruby said, crossing her arms, leaning with feigned nonchalance against the porch rail. “Tell me something I don’t know.”
Nora gazed up at her daughter, saw the wary expectation in those dark eyes, and took a deep breath. “You think I don’t understand you,” she began softly, “but I know how it feels to turn your back on a parent.”
Ruby pulled away from the railing. Frowning, she sat down on the white wicker chair beside Nora. “You loved your parents. You told us all about them.”
“The stories I told you girls were true,” she answered slowly, “and they were lies. I was never good at making stuff up, so my bedtime stories were always bits and pieces of my life . . . cleaned up. I wanted you and Caro to have a sense of where you’d come from.”
“What do you mean, cleaned up?”
Nora’s gaze was steady. “No matter how dark a place is, there are always moments of light. That’s what I passed on to you and Caroline, my moments of light.” She took a deep breath. “On the day I graduated from high school, I left home, and I never went back again.”
“Did you run away?”
“From my father, yes. I loved my mother.”
“How long was it before you saw them again?”
Nora couldn’t help it; she closed her eyes. “I saw my father once—at my mother’s funeral. Before you and Caroline were born.”
“And never again?”
“Never again.” Nora wished those two little words didn’t hurt.
The emotion was so old it ought to have decomposed by now.
She leaned toward Ruby. “I never saw him again, didn’t even attend his funeral, and all my life I’ve had to live with that decision.
It’s not regret I feel so much, but more of .
. . a sad longing. I wish he had been a different man.
Most of all, I wish I could have loved him. ”
“Did you ever love him?”
“Perhaps . . . when I was young. If so, I don’t remember it.”
Ruby got up, walked to the railing, and stared out at the sea. Without turning around, she said, “I read the People magazine article about you. It said—and I quote: ‘The cornerstones of Nora Bridge’s message are forgiveness and commitment.’” Ruby turned around at last. “Did you try to forgive him?”
Nora wanted to lie. It was easy to see that Ruby was asking as much about their relationship as she was about Nora and her father’s.
But there was little enough chance for Nora and Ruby; with deception, there would be none at all.
“Years later, after I’d had my own children—and lost their love—I began to regret how I’d treated him.
As a young woman, I didn’t—couldn’t—understand how hard life can be.
I think that’s how he felt. It’s no excuse, but it gives me a way to see him that turns the hatred into pity.
Of course, that understanding came too late. He was already gone.”
“So, I should forgive you now, while I still have the time. Is that your none-too-subtle message?”
Nora looked up sharply. “Not everything is about you, Ruby. I told you something painful about me tonight, painful and private. I expect you to handle my life with respect, if you can’t manage care.”
Ruby looked abashed. “I’m sorry.”
“Apology accepted. Now, tell me something about you.”
Ruby stared at Nora through unreadable eyes.
Nora steeled herself. This was going to be bad . . .
“That summer—you remember it, that time you left—I thought you’d come back.”
“That’s no secret.”
“I waited and waited. By the next June, Caroline had left, and it was just Dad and me at home. One night I just . . . snapped.” She swallowed hard and looked away for a moment, then collected herself and began again.
“I drove down to Seattle and went to that dance club, the Monastery, all by myself. I picked up some kid—I can’t even remember his name.
He had blue hair and pierced ears and dead eyes.
I went back to his apartment and let him fuck me.
” She paused for effect. “It was my first time.”
It hurt as much as Ruby had intended. Nora thought: There it is. My legacy. She didn’t dare to say she was sorry. Ruby would only toss those ridiculously inadequate words right back at her.
“I did it to hurt you. I thought you’d come home eventually and then I’d tell you. I used to imagine the look on your face when I described it.”
“You wanted to see me cry.”
“At the very least.”
Nora sighed. “I would have, if that makes you feel better.”
“It’s too late for any of us to be feeling better.” She sighed. “Dean didn’t take it very well, either.”
Dean. For a moment Nora hurt so much she couldn’t breathe evenly.
That’s how the grief hit her lately. Like a rogue wave rising from a flat sea, it came out of nowhere and hit with hurricane force. Sometimes she went whole hours without thinking about Eric, and then she would suddenly remember.
Now, it had been Dean’s name that reminded her, but it could have been anything—the sound of a school bell ringing, a man’s laughter coming from another room. Anything.
She knew she should say something—the pain in Ruby’s eyes when she said Dean’s name was unmistakable—but Nora’s throat was blocked too tightly to speak.
“That’s enough quid pro quo for one night,” Ruby said sharply. “I’m going to go upstairs and take a bath.”
Nora watched her daughter leave. Then, quietly, she said, “Good night, Ruby.”
Wheeling back into her bedroom, Nora elbowed the door shut behind her and crawled up onto the bed. Then she reached for the phone and dialed Eric’s number.
He answered on the third ring, and she could tell that he was heavily medicated. “Hullo?”
“Hey, Eric,” she said, leaning back against the headboard. “You sound like you’ve been shooting heroin.”
“Thass how I feel.” It seemed to take a long time for him to speak, and the words came out mangled and elongated.
“Are you okay?” she asked softly.
“Ssshure. Jesst a little doped up. New meds . . .”
Nora had seen him go through this before. It was always hell to get the pain prescription just right. She knew it wasn’t a good time for them to speak. “I’ll let you sleep now, okay? I’ll call back tomorrow.”
“Ssleep,” he murmured. “Yeah. Morrow.”
“Good night, Eric.”
“Goo’ night.”
Nora listened to the dial tone so long the recording came on, then, finally, she hung up.
Ruby went upstairs, where she grabbed her yellow legal pad and crawled up onto the bed.
This place, Summer Island, is killing me.
When I left Los Angeles, I was strong and funny—not successful, perhaps, but at least I was me.
Here, things are different. I smell the roses my grandmother planted and dry my hands on towels she embroidered .
. . I sit at the table where I grew up, remembering when I couldn’t reach the floor with my feet.
I stare at the beach, and in the movement of the waves, I hear my sister’s laughter.
And then there is my mother.
We have battles to fight; there is no doubt about it, but I’m afraid to ask the questions, and she, I can tell, is afraid to answer them. So we dance out of time to different pieces of music.
Quid pro quo. My secret for one of yours; this is the game we have begun to play. With it, I know I won’t be able to stand on the edge of intimacy. Sooner or later, I will have to dive into those cold, deep waters, and there is no end to the ripples my entrance will make.
I will learn things about my mother that I don’t want to know. Hell, I already have. I know, for instance, that she ran away from home right after high school and never spoke to her father again.
Even yesterday, I wouldn’t have been surprised by that. I would have said, “Of course. Running away is what Nora Bridge does best.”
But I watched her eyes as she spoke of her father. I saw the pain . . .
It hurt her to run away. Part of me wishes I hadn’t seen that because, as I stood there, listening to my mother’s heartache, I wondered for the first time if it hurt her to leave her children.