“I know who they’re from,” Angie said listlessly. “And I ain’t astounded he somehow found out I was here. He’s got his ways.”
Mary stepped over and turned the white card so she could read it. “ ‘Love, Fred.’ That’s all it says.”
Without emotion, Angie said, “Surprise, surprise.”
“Better’n nothing,” Mary said.
“That’s what I’m s’pose to think.”
“I’ll see you in the morning, Angie.”
“Mary?”
“Yeah?”
“Don’t take the bastard back. Don’t do the same stupid dance.”
“Let’s worry about you for a change,” Mary said.
“There’s a fresh bottle in the hall closet, behind the vacuum sweeper.”
“Why tell me?”
“Aren’t you gonna drive over to my apartment and clean it of anything with alcohol in it, like last time this happened?”
“That’s where I was going,” Mary admitted.
“Just trying to make it easier for you,” Angie said.
“Thanks.”
“Anyways, you’d’ve found that one right off.”
“Want me to feed Boris?”
“No, he’s a cat that makes out for hisself. Just leave the kitchen window open a crack so he can come and go as he pleases.”
Mary walked from the room. Dr. Keshna was far down the hall, coming toward her with tiny, mincing steps. As she passed, she nodded and smiled warmly, as if Mary were an old and dear friend, but she didn’t speak.
As Mary was leaving the hospital, she saw Fred slumped in one of the beige plastic chairs in the waiting room. He spotted her, dropped his Newsweek-the one with Gorbachev on the cover- and hurried over to stand nervously in front of her. “You seen Angie?”
He looked as if he’d dressed in a hurry, and his breath smelled like bourbon. Great.
“How’d you know she was here?” Mary asked.
“Buddy of mine name of Jerome brought her in. After he dropped her off, he realized who she was and gave me a call to let me know what happened.”
“They’re gonna run some tests,” Mary said, “then release her in the morning.”
“But how is she?”
“Not good.” Let the bastard worry.
“That nurse behind the desk don’t know elbow from asshole. She told me nobody could see Angie.”
“She’s right. That’s why I had to leave.”
“I can be here tomorrow morning to check her outa this place,” Fred said.
“I’ll do that,” Mary said. “She’s expecting me.”
Fred gave a bourbony sigh and wiped the side of his neck. “Listen, I don’t blame you for not liking me so much, Mary.”
She didn’t answer. Started walking toward the door.
“I tried to get in touch with you soon as I heard,” Fred said behind her. She felt his closeness as he followed. “There was no answer at your apartment, so I called Jake at work to see if he knew where you might be. He clocked out right away and went looking for you but couldn’t find you neither. He’s the one drove me down here.”
Mary stopped. “Where is he?”
“Still parking the car, I guess.”
Leaving Fred standing there, she walked quickly out the door and strode across the parking lot toward her car. She didn’t want to see Jake. Not now. Please.
She made it into the car and scooted down low behind the steering wheel. She was afraid. She didn’t like the vague, dispirited way her mother had talked, as if there were nothing left behind the weariness and defeat in Angie’s eyes. Angie was someone she’d always taken for granted, but if something happened to her, Mary would be alone. How alone she was now beginning to realize. Yet she’d see more and more of Angie-the Angie up there in the hospital bed-each morning when she looked in the mirror. There was no way to get more alone. That was how she felt right now, anyway. Her future lay like a trap before her.
“How’s Angie?” she heard Jake ask. God, he’d noticed her even slouched in her car parked among hundreds of other cars.
He’d opened the passenger-side door and was scooting in to sit next to her.
“I don’t know,” Mary said. “They’re not allowing anyone to see her till tomorrow.”
“Christ! She that bad from guzzling nothing but booze? Hey, you positive she’s not into serious drugs?”
Mary hadn’t thought of that, but she was sure nothing could come between Angie and gin. “Alcohol’s her drug of choice. She doesn’t need anything else.”
“Hell of a way to be, huh?”
“They wanna run some tests.”
“Hospitals love to run tests,” Jake said. “Keeps them in business. And that’s all they are these days, believe me, nothing but businesses.” He must have cleaned up before driving to get Fred; Mary could smell his deodorant, which was not unlike the admitting nurse’s perfume. It was making her nauseated in the car’s stifling interior. Panic was circling her like a vulture, eager to exploit any sign of weakness.
“I gotta go,” she said. She twisted the ignition key and the engine kicked and sputtered to life.
“Mary, you said nobody can see Angie now anyway. No sense staying here.”
“That’s exactly why I’m leaving.”
“I meant there’s no sense in me staying. So let me come with you, Mary. Please. For you. You need somebody.”
The future, like a trap. Either future. Some world. She was glad Fred was waiting inside. Fred, good for something.
“No,” she told him. “Anyway, you’ve gotta drive Fred home.”
“I can phone and tell him where my car’s parked, and where I got an extra key taped behind the license plate. Let him drive it to his place and we’ll pick it up later. This is no time for you to be by yourself, babe.”
He was right. They both knew he was right, so why fight it? Why pretend?
Reluctantly she embraced something deep in her. Then the trap, the cold future, seemed to recede. A person had what and whom they had, and she might as well own up to that fact.
She wished right now she were somewhere else, a place where there was music and dancing, a secure, predictable corner of her life that wasn’t threatening or ugly.
But she was here, in the hot parking lot of Saint Sebastian Hospital, talking to Jake in the sickly glare of the overhead lights. Like it or not, this was her reality.
He placed his hand on top of hers on the steering wheel and gave it a gentle squeeze that hurt slightly and pressured her heart. “Please, Mary?”
“Let’s go,” she said. “You can help me search for bottles.”
17
Mary clenched her eyes shut and felt what he was doing take her over. She was helpless, shameless and defenseless, and in a way it was a relief to relinquish control to someone, something, beyond her. No control, no responsibility, no fear.
She couldn’t have stopped herself even if that was what she wanted. Her stomach tensed and her upper body levitated off the mattress as she groaned and reached orgasm. She was someone else and she was no one at all. For an instant she felt as if she were soaring toward the ceiling. Then she was aware of Jake’s heavy hand between her breasts, pushing her back down on the bed.
He knew her so well, knew how to move in her and what to say, and when not to say anything. Within a few minutes she twined her legs around his thrusting buttocks and reached orgasm again, though this time not so violently.
Seconds later he moaned. She thought she heard his teeth gnash. Then his body arched trembling against hers and she felt him release inside her.
Energy went out of him as he exhaled against her cheek in a long, hot sigh.
“You okay, babe?” he asked. Despite the fact that he was supporting himself on his elbows, his perspiring body was a crushing weight.
“Yeah, I think so,” she said hoarsely. “Just get off, please.”
After he rolled off her they lay silently, listening to the hum of the air-conditioner and feeling a cool draft flow across their damp nakedness. It had all been so systematic, by now almost a ritual.
About half an hour passed before Jake kissed the side of her neck and moved his hand down between her legs.