"Do you have any coffee, Jacqueline?"
"I'll make some."
I entered the kitchen, lips pursed. Coffee used to be an important part of my day, but now that I lived without a schedule caffeine wasn't necessary. I managed to remember how the machine worked, and got a pot going as Alan came in and leaned against the breakfast bar.
"Is this awkward?" he asked. He wore blue Dockers, a white button-down shirt, and a familiar faded brown bomber jacket.
"Don't you think so?"
"No."
I wanted to say something, to hurt him, but didn't have the energy. Maybe after some coffee.
"How are you doing?"
"Fine. Okay. Good."
"I heard you got shot again."
"I wasn't aware that you knew about the first time."
"Your mother keeps me informed."
I folded my arms. "Since when?"
"Since always."
"What does that mean?"
"Ever since our divorce, Mary and I have been in touch."
I snorted. "Bullshit."
"Why is it bullshit? I always loved your mother."
I had him there. "Since when did love stop you from leaving?"
Alan nodded, almost imperceptibly.
"Jacqueline!" my mother called from the living room. "You didn't tell me you had a cat!"
"Mom, don't!"
I rushed past Alan, hoping to prevent the maiming, and was shocked to see Mom cradling Mr. Friskers in her arms and stroking his head.
"He's adorable. What's his name?"
"Mr. Friskers."
"Oh. Well, he's adorable anyway."
"You should put him down, Mom. He doesn't like people very much."
"Nonsense. He seems to like me just fine."
"Then why is he growling at you?"
"That's not growling, Jacqueline. That's purring."
Son of a gun. Damn cat never purred for me. Not once.
My mother made a show of looking around the apartment. She tapped her knuckles on a large cardboard box. "What's with all the packing, dear? Putting some things into storage?"
"Yes." I hadn't yet told my mother about moving in with Latham.
"Good. I'll need the room."
She beamed at me, so full of strength and life, so unlike the woman I saw in the hospital bed months before.
I tried to sound upbeat. "You've decided to move in?"
"Yes, I have. I know I've threatened to disown you whenever you brought it up, but I came to a different conclusion. I don't believe I need you to look after me, but I don't have too many years left, and I'd like to spend them in the company of my daughter."
I smiled, wondering how real it looked. I'd given up trying to bully my mother into living with me, which is why I finally relented with Latham.
He would be crushed.
And, truth be told, I was crushed too.
"I have a buyer for the condo in Florida. I brought some papers for you to sign."
"Great."
"I should be ready to move in next week."
"Great."
Mom set down the cat and hobbled up to me, putting a wrinkled hand on my cheek.
"We'll talk more later, dear. We caught an early flight and I'm exhausted. Do you mind if I take a short nap here on the couch?"
"Use my bed, Mom."
At least someone would be using it. For something.
"Go grab something to eat with Alan. I know you have a lot of catching up to do."
She gave my face a tender pat and limped into the bedroom.
Alan stood by the window, hands in his pockets.
"Are you up for breakfast?" he asked.
"No."
"Would you like me to go?"
"Yes."
"Are you taking anything for depression?"
"Why would you think I was depressed?"
He shrugged, almost imperceptibly. Much of Alan's emotional range was imperceptible.
"Your mother seems to think you need someone now."
"So you came running to the rescue? Isn't that odd, considering the last time I needed someone, you fled like a thief in the night."
He smiled.
"I didn't leave like a thief in the night."
"Yes, you did."
"I left in the mid-afternoon, and I didn't take a single thing with me."
"You took my jacket."
"What jacket?"
"The one you're wearing right now."
"This is my jacket."
"I'm the one who wore it all the time."
"Why don't we fight about it over breakfast?"
"I don't want breakfast."
"You need to eat."
"How do you know what I need?"
Alan walked past me, and I wondered if I hit a nerve. I followed him into the kitchen.
"I said, how do you know what I need?"
"I heard you."
He found a mug, poured some coffee, and handed it to me.
"I don't want coffee."
"Yes you do. You're always pissy until you have your first cup of coffee."
I whined, "I am not pissy."
Alan started to laugh, and I had to bite my lower lip to keep from grinning.
"Fine. Gimmee the coffee."
He gimmeed, and I took a sip, surprised at how good it tasted.
"If you don't want to go out, I can cook." Alan opened the fridge and pulled out a single egg. "It's your last one. We can split it."
"I'd like my half sunny-side up."
I sat at my dinette set and watched Alan search for a frying pan. It brought back memories. Fond ones. Alan made breakfast almost every morning, during the years we'd been married.
Having found the pan, Alan searched the fridge again.
"No butter?"
"I haven't been to the store in a while."
"I can tell. What's this, a lime or a potato?" He held out a greenish brown thing.
"I think it's a tomato."
"There's something growing on it."
"Save it. I may need it if I ever get a staph infection."
He tossed the tomato in the garbage, and found two red potatoes, half a green onion, and half a bottle of chardonnay. From the freezer he took a bag of mixed vegetables and a pound of bacon. Then he went through my cabinets, liberating some olive oil, several spices, and a jar of salsa.
"This doesn't seem like an appetizing combination of food items."
He winked. "I've got to work with what I've got."
I sipped my coffee and watched him for the twenty minutes it took to microwave, peel, and dice the potatoes, fry the bacon, and saute the veggies, chopped onion, salsa, and assorted spices in olive oil and white wine. He added the potatoes and bacon, stirred like mad, and then dumped the contents onto two plates.
"Hash a la Daniels." He set the plate in front of me.
"Smells good."
"If it's lousy, there's always pizza. Hold on."
The egg was still frying on the stove. He slid it out of the pan, sunny-side up, onto my pile of hash.
"Bon appetit."
I took a bite, and that led to two and three, and pretty soon I was shoveling it down my throat conveyor-belt fashion.
We didn't speak during breakfast, but the silence wasn't uncomfortable.
When I scooped the last bite into my mouth, Alan whisked away my plate and refilled my coffee.
"Still angry?" Alan asked.
"A little. I thought we had an unspoken understanding all these years."
"Which was?"
"You don't call me, I don't call you."
He nodded, putting his plate into the dishwasher.
"I never called you, Jack, because I knew it would hurt."
"You didn't seem to mind hurting me when you left."
"I wasn't referring to you in this case."
"You're saying it would have hurt you to call me?"
"Yes."
What could I say to that? I chose, "Oh."
Alan closed the dishwasher, then sat across from me, leaning in.
"So, how are you?" he asked.
"Fine."
"I know you're not fine, Jack."
"How would you know that?"
"Still have the insomnia?"
I looked away. "Yeah."
"You feel guilty about that cop's wife."
"Not really. IA cleared me on the shooting. It was completely by-the-book."
"By-the-book isn't enough for you. You have to be perfect, or you can't live with yourself."
I felt the armor I'd built up over the last decade begin to flake away. I needed to hate Alan. That's how I got through it.
"You don't know me like you think you do."