
The River Is Waiting (Oprah’s Book Club)
Chapter One
CHAPTER ONE
It’s six a.m. and I’m the first one up. Spotify’s playing that Chainsmokers song I like.
If we go down, then we go down together …
I take an Ativan and chase my morning coffee with a couple of splashes of hundred-proof Captain Morgan.
I return the bottle to its hiding place inside the twenty-quart lobster pot we never use, put the lid on, and put it back in the cabinet above the fridge that Emily can’t reach without the step stool.
Then I fill the twins’ sippy cups and start making French toast for breakfast. If we go down, then we go down together .
I cut the music so I can listen for the kids, but that song’s probably going to play in my head all morning.
Emily’s up now and in the bathroom, getting ready for work.
When the shower stops, I hear the twins babbling to each other in the nursery we converted from my studio almost two years ago.
My easel, canvases, and paints had been exiled to the space behind the basement stairs.
It wasn’t much of a sacrifice. I made my living as a commercial artist and had been struggling after hours and on weekends to make “serious” art, but after the babies were born, the last thing I felt like doing was staring at a blank canvas and waiting for some abstraction to move from my brain down my arm to my brush to see what came out.
Maisie was the alpha twin; Niko, who would learn to creep, walk, and say words after his sister did, was the beta.
In the developmental race, Niko always came in second, but, as their personalities began to emerge, his sister became our more serious, more driven twin and he was our mischievous little laughing boy.
I loved them more deeply every day for who each was becoming.
How could some artistic indulgence of mine have competed with what our lovemaking had created? It wasn’t even close.
“Yoo-hoo, peekaboo!” I call in to them, playing now-you-see-me-now-you-don’t at the doorway into their room.
“Daddy!” they say simultaneously. Their delight at seeing me fills me with momentary joy—my elation aided, I guess, by the benzo and booze.
I lift them, one after the other, out of the crib they share.
The twins often hold on to each other as they sleep and sometimes even suck each other’s thumb.
I lay them on their backs on the carpet and take off their diapers.
Both are sodden and Maisie’s has two pellet-sized poops.
As I wet-wipe and rediaper them, I say, “Hey, Miss Maisie, where’s your nose?
” We were playing that game yesterday. “Very good! And how about you, Mr. Niko? Where’s your ear?
” He puts his finger to his nose. “Nooo!” I groan in mock horror.
“You can’t hear with your nose!” Both kids giggle.
I start singing “Wheels on the Bus,” that song Emily sometimes sings with them when they’re in the tub.
Maisie listens attentively and does a few of the gestures with me while her brother kicks his legs and blows spit bubbles.
I lift them up, one in each arm, and walk them into the kitchen just as the smoke alarm starts screaming.
The room is hazy and smells of burnt French toast. Frightened by the blare of the alarm, both kids begin crying.
From down the hall, Emily calls, “Corby?” and I call back, “Everything’s good.
I got it!” I slide the kids into their high chairs and snap their trays in place.
Point up at the alarm and tell them Daddy’s going to stop the noise.
“Watch,” I say. Climbing onto the step stool, I reach up and silence the damned thing.
“Daddy to the rescue!” I announce. Jumping off the stool, I do a little dance that turns their fear into laughter.
“Daddy funny!” Maisie says. In my best Elvis imitation, I slur, “Thank you. Thank you very much.” Of the two of us, I’m the fun parent and these two are my best audience.
When I give them their sippy cups, I blow raspberries against their necks.
They lift their shoulders and squeal with delight.
By the time Emily comes into the kitchen, I’ve already put her coffee and a stack of French toast on the table, the older pieces on the bottom and the fresh slices I’d made to replace the burnt ones on top.
“Mama!” Niko shouts. Emily kisses the top of his head.
“How’s my favorite boy today?” she asks.
Then, turning to his sister, she kisses her head, too, and says, “And how’s my favorite girl?
” She loves both of our kids, of course, but she favors Niko, whose emerging personality is like mine.
Maisie is clearly her mother’s daughter.
She’s less silly, more self-sufficient. Niko and I are the needy ones.
As Emily sits down to eat, I feel a surge of guilt thinking back to a morning a few weeks earlier.
Emily told me she and some of the other teachers were going to Fiesta’s after school for drinks and an early dinner.
“I’ll be home by seven, seven thirty at the latest,” she’d said.
I reminded her that Friday is family night.
“I’ll have had them all day. Not to mention all week.
Did it occur to you when you were making your plans that I might need a break? ”
She gave my shoulder a sympathetic squeeze.
“I know you do, Corby, but Amber’s really struggling right now.
People have already RSVP’d to the wedding.
She’s been fitted for her dress. Their honeymoon is booked.
” Amber’s a fellow teacher who was going to get married next month until her fiancé told her he was gay.
“He completely blindsided her. She just really needs our support right now.”
“And I don’t?”
She stared at me, shaking her head. “If you’re going to make a big deal about a couple of hours, then fine,” she said. “I’ll tell the others I can’t make it.”
“No, you go ahead, babe. Fiesta’s, that Mexican place, right? Enjoy yourself. Have a margarita on me. What the hell? Have three or four. Get hammered.”
She was almost out the door when she pivoted, her eyes flashing. “That’s your thing, not mine.” Touché.
She said goodbye to the kids but not to me.
At the front window, I watched her get into her car, slam the door, and drive off.
My regret kicked in a few minutes later—probably before she’d even pulled into the school parking lot.
I texted her: Sorry I was being a jerk. Go out with the others and help your friend. No worries.
Her terse return text— K Thx —let me know she was still pissed, which, in turn, pissed me off all over again and made me feel justified in taking another Ativan to calm down. That was what that doctor prescribed them for, wasn’t it?
Emily didn’t get home that evening until after nine.
I heard her in the kitchen before I saw her.
“Hi, Corby,” she called. “I got you an order of chicken enchiladas if you haven’t eaten yet.
” I hadn’t eaten but told her I had. “Okay, I’ll put them in the fridge and you can have them tomorrow.
” She entered the living room with that tipsy glow she gets on the rare occasion when she has a second glass of wine, but her face deflated when she saw Niko asleep on my lap instead of in the crib. “He’s sick,” I said. “Earache.”
She sat down on the couch beside us, stroked his hair, and asked whether I’d taken his temperature. “A hundred and one,” I told her. The thermometer actually read one-hundred-point-four but I’d added the extra sixth-tenths of a degree. Yeah, I can be that small.
“Did you give him any Tylenol?”
I nodded. “About an hour ago. So how did group-therapy-with-nachos go?”
Instead of answering, she stood and picked up empties from the coffee table. She’d mentioned before that she doesn’t like me drinking beer at night if I’m watching the kids, but she didn’t call me on it that night. Her guilt was at a satisfactory level.
I’m sure Emily is keeping track of my nighttime beer consumption, but I’m confident she’s unaware that I’ve started drinking the hard stuff during the day.
Tuesday is when the recycling truck comes down our street, so I’ve begun hiding the empty liquor bottles until then.
I wait until she leaves for school, then take them out of hiding and bring the blue box out to the curb, feeling embarrassed by the evidence of my growing reliance on alcohol but proud of myself for pulling off my daytime drinking deception.
She knows I’m taking that prescription for my nerves, of course.
In fact, she was the one who urged me to see someone because I’d become so edgy and sleep-deprived.
What she doesn’t know is that I’ve begun taking more than “one before bedtime and/or as needed.”
I tell myself that “and/or as needed” is the loophole I can use if that doctor questions my need for an early refill.
I’m not too worried about my growing reliance on “better living through chemistry.” It’s just a stopgap thing until my situation turns around.
It’s not like I’m addicted to benzos or booze.
There was that DUI, but there were extenuating circumstances: namely that I lost my job that day.
Everything will right itself once I get back to work.
And okay, maybe I’m not looking for another position as hard as I was at the start, but I’ll get back on the hunt soon.