A very pregnant pause while I drum my fingers impatiently on the dashboard and David pretends to be busy driving.
“David? How often do you speak with her?”
“Oh. Maybe three or four times.”
“Three or four times since you broke up?”
Color is flooding David’s face. “A week.”
“Oh. My. Fucking. God.” The words explode out in a howl of outrage so loud, David jumps. “Are you kidding me? After all she put you through with that murder investigation? She slept with the guy she was accused of killing, remember? She manipulated you and me and a goddamned fourteen-year-old kid to save her own skin. And you’re still in touch with her?”
David’s jaw is tight. His eyes are fixed straight ahead. His shoulders are bunched so tight that I think if I poked him in the arm, they’d shatter.
We’re pulling into the parking lot of an IKEA. David finds a space to park and it’s not until he’s shut off the engine that he says another word. Then he doesn’t turn to look at me, but simply says, “Look, Anna. We’re never going to agree about this. But you know me. I won’t break Tracey’s heart. She has nothing to worry about. You have nothing to worry about. Can we just let it go at that?”
Then he opens the door to the Hummer and jumps to the ground.
CHAPTER 4
IT’S NOT UNTIL WE’VE WOUND OUR WAY THROUGH A maze of living room, dining room, office and kitchen furniture to arrive at the “kids stuff” that David again acknowledges my presence. He’s standing in front of a bed shaped like a race car.
“I would have killed for a bed like this when I was a kid.” He’s running a hand over the frame. “It’s not too big for John-John, is it?”
His voice has lost the anger and bitterness of our conversation in the parking lot. I jump at the chance to smooth things over. “I think it’s perfect! And John-John makes Lego cars all the time.”
David has moved from the bed to an area with rugs and toys. He points to a rug laid out like a racetrack. “Get this, too, and those wooden cars. And that lamp and desk.”
He’s picking out things faster than I can write the item numbers on an order sheet. IKEA is a big warehouse with the displays in one area and the pickup in another. I start to laugh. “Hold on there, cowboy. I can’t keep up.”
But David has already moved onto sheets and towels and shower curtains. “That bedroom has its own bathroom, doesn’t it?” he asks. When I nod, he starts loading our shopping cart with sheets and towels and a brightly color-splashed shower curtain.
In less than an hour, we have everything. I’ve never seen David move so fast. I follow along, caught in the undertow of his enthusiasm. It’s a side of David new to me. A side I would not have expected.
When we’ve had everything loaded into the back of the Hummer, and are on our way to my place, I risk igniting the firestorm again.
“What do you and Gloria talk about?” I ask softly.
I wait, shoulders bunched, for the explosion. Instead, David says, “Mostly how her career’s going. Where she’s going on location next. Who she’s dating . . .”
Sounds like Gloria. There’s Gloria and then there’s the world. “Does she ever ask about what you’re doing? Who you’re dating?”
“Of course she does,” he replies with more than a hint of impatience. “Why do you always assume the worst about her?”
I grunt. Let me count the ways. But instead, I say, “I worry about you where Gloria is concerned. She seems to have some mystical hold on you I’ve never been able to figure out.”
He glances sideways at me. “You mean besides the fact that she’s beautiful, famous, rich, an international star and sex with her was—”
“Okay,” I interrupt. “TMI.” At least he didn’t say sex with her is. I regroup. “Which brings me back to the question I asked you before. Where does all this leave Tracey?”
He raises his shoulders in a half shrug. “I told you. I won’t hurt Tracey. Gloria is fantasy. Tracey is real. Someone I can rely on to be honest. Someone I can count on.”
I shake my head. Does he even know how demeaning that sounds? “Do you think you’re being fair to Tracey?”
His jaw sets. “I’ve always been honest with Tracey. I’ve never promised her more than I can deliver.”
“Maybe not in words, but I see the way she looks at you.”
He shrugs again. But we’re pulling into the back of the cottage and I have to jump out to open the gate before he can answer. Then we’re busy with boxes and packages and I get caught up in the excitement of tackling John-John’s room.
David is unloading one of the cartons containing the bed from the Hummer when he asks, “Want some help putting this stuff together?”
His tone is full of eager anticipation. He sounds as enthusiastic as I feel. Who am I to deny him such pleasure? Besides, I looked at one of the instruction sheets. It’s written in three dozen languages not one of which was fumble-fingered female. “I’d love it!”
It takes us twenty minutes to unload everything and haul it up the stairs to the second story. I dump the white goods on my bedroom floor and David and I tear yards of bubble wrap and cardboard from the furniture pieces. Then we hunker down and piece the bed together. I read (or interpret) the instructions. Most are stick-figure drawings with one or two words to clarify what you’re looking at. Not that David needs much direction. He’s got that bed put together and we’re standing back admiring it in less time than it took us to buy it.
“How about a beer?” I ask.
“Sounds good.” David has wandered over to the open closet. Inside, I’d stashed the cans of paint bought to transform the stuffy adult room to something more to a kid’s liking. He’s looking at the color swatches. “This is great. Why don’t we get started?”
“What? You want to help me paint?”
“Right after that beer.”
I REALIZE, STANDING SIDE BY SIDE WITH DAVID, SWIPING paint rollers of pale yellow over the walls of what’s to become John-John’s bedroom, how much I’ve missed doing simple, human things with him. How much I’ve missed our friendship.
I actually have to swallow down a lump in my throat before I can say, “You know what this reminds me of?”
“Painting our office two years ago,” he replies without missing a beat.
I hear the smile in his voice. “You spilled a whole pan full of paint,” I say.
“Because you bumped the ladder,” he says.
“I did not. You saw a spider in the corner and jumped off the ladder so fast, everything went flying.”
A chuckle. “Well, it was a big spider.”
I snicker. “We’ve had some good times.”
He’s quiet. When I glance over, his shoulders are slumped, that little muscle at the corner of his jaw is jumping.
“What’s wrong, David?”
He continues to paint, eyes tracing the swaths of color onto the wall as they appear from the end of his roller.
“If something’s wrong, I wish you’d tell me.”
His hand pauses in mid-stroke. “Nothing’s wrong.”
David keeps painting, pushing the roller back and forth. I’ve stopped painting now and turn to face him. “That’s bullshit, David. What is it?”
The silence stretches on. I don’t take my eyes off him, fixing him with what I hope is a laser stare until finally he gives in with a growl.
“You’ve never forgiven me.”
My stomach does a small roll. I know exactly where this is coming from. What I did this morning, going after that skip alone, has awakened the dragon. Angry at myself, I blurt, “That’s because there’s nothing to forgive.”
He lays the paint roller down in the pan and wipes his hands slowly and deliberately with a rag. “You know that’s not true. Because of me, you were raped and beaten and left to die.”