I will refer to this special friend as “KAY.” Eventually, I will tell you what this acronym stands for, but for now let me simply say that just because KAY is more popular as a girl’s name than a boy’s, do not assume KAY is female. Do not assume anything.
My closer level of friendship with KAY started one day when we were alone and confided in each other more deeply than we had with the rest of the group. We began meeting one on one without telling the group. We confessed more about our lives, our feelings, our opinions, our dreams.
We’d meet for walks. For coffees. It was strangely like having an affair, except that it was not sexual — just a very caring intimacy.
One day, KAY did something very bad and told me about it two weeks later and made the decision to do something very bad again, but not immediately; instead, KAY would do it exactly two years from then — which is now just a couple of weeks away.
You’ll have to prepare yourselves for the date (Friday, October 27), hopefully get through it, and then put it behind you, and try to forget.
In all honesty, you will never be able to forget. But with a little luck and my postmortem guidance, your group might be able to return to some semblance of what it is today. I know it’s asking a lot, but I hope you will see your way to forgiving KAY her/his folly.
Love,
Gabriel
I call Georgia.
“Hello?” she answers, sounding loud and excited and out of breath.
“I just got another letter from Gabriel.”
“Oh yeah? It’s so nice of him to stay in touch, isn’t it?”
I’m not in the mood. “Not funny.”
“Sorry. What does he say?”
I read her the letter.
She greets it with stunned silence, which jibes with my mood much better.
“How weird,” she finally says.
“Are you KAY?” I ask.
“Oh, I am more than okay.”
“Not O-KAY. KAY!”
“No.”
“You’re not making much effort to deny it.”
“If I don’t sound fully engaged, it’s because I was just about to call you with some news. I GOT MY LAPTOP BACK! Someone dropped it off at my building with a note that said, ‘Sorry for the delay. Been busy.’” She laughs.
“I’m so happy for you. That makes up a little for Gabriel’s letter.”
Her tone sobers up. “Oh, yeah. What a disturbing letter. He’s even weirder in death than in life.”
I decide I want to read the letter to the others in person when I see them tomorrow, in case their expressions reveal which one of them is KAY.
Peter Marrick
Sunday, 15 October
I had the intern return the laptop. That’s one thing off my plate.
I’ve been spending a lot of time trying to think of ways to meet Barb and her friends, other than the obvious way. I haven’t been able to come up with any ideas due to my damned lack of imagination — ironic and rather tragic in view of how much I crave to be creative. Which is one of many reasons why I need to meet these people.
I got a complaint at work that I look distracted.
I can’t obsess about this anymore. I will meet them the obvious way.
Chapter Six
On Sunday, I invite my friends over and read Gabriel’s letter out loud to them. They act surprised in appropriate ways (except for Georgia, who’s heard it already), and I can’t decipher which of them might be KAY.
While we work, Lily continues trying to beautify Jack through her piano playing, but without success. Upset and frustrated, she leaves abruptly.
Georgia says she doesn’t like her novel anymore, that it’s not as great as she thought it was when she believed it was lost forever. She says the memory of it took on monumental proportions, and now the reality of it is just a bit of a letdown. She attributes this to absence making the heart grow fonder, and it makes her sick.
Penelope says Georgia is probably simply suffering from some sort of post-traumatic reverse syndrome of taking something for granted as soon as she gets it back.
And I remind Georgia that she’s always told me this was her best novel yet, so it probably is.
LILY DOES NOT call that night even though I asked her to when she stormed out of my apartment earlier. I’m concerned about her. I know she’s upset that she hasn’t been able to beautify Jack through her music. I restrain myself from calling her, not wanting to be overly protective.
What dramatically increases my concern is that, at two o’clock in the afternoon the next day, movers show up at my apartment to take away Lily’s piano. They tell me those are her instructions. They show me a form she filled out requesting its removal. While they carry out the upright piano, I’m anxiously trying to reach Lily by phone. She’s not picking up. I curse myself for not calling her last night.
As I run out of my building to look for Lily, I pass Adam the doorman who says to me, “One day you’ll find yourself, and wish you hadn’t.”
I’m a bit unsettled by that comment as I jog the few blocks to Lily’s apartment, trying to refrain from holding my bouncing fake fat.
I ring Lily’s downstairs buzzer. There’s no answer. A tenant on his way out lets me in. I knock on Lily’s apartment door. No answer. I can’t stop my worry from mounting, though I know it may be irrational. I call Jack, Georgia, and Penelope. Within minutes, they have joined me. Jack gets the super to open her door. Lily’s not in her apartment.
We go to my place. We keep calling her.
At five p.m. we’re sitting on my couch, trying to reassure ourselves that she’s okay, but not doing a very good job of it. I mention to my friends that three days ago she seemed delusional, claiming her hands had turned to mirrors and that it felt like death was trying to take hold of her, but that she fought it and it went away.
“Yeah, she told me that too. Not reassuring.” Georgia pauses and takes a deep breath before adding, “But let’s be optimistic. I’m sure she is fine, and will be fine, and in fact will probably make all her dreams come true. I’ve noticed that in life there are three ingredients that, when present simultaneously, create a potent combination: talent, love, and lack of beauty. One’s love for someone, unrequited due to one’s insufficient beauty, can motivate one to do great things to win that love, if one has the talent. Just look at what Lily’s achieved so far. And I bet it’s not stopping.”
Twenty minutes later, the doorman buzzes me. We brighten, gripped by hope.
But when I answer my doorman intercom, I hear Adam’s voice say softly in my ear, “Hi, piece of shit. There are some deliverymen here for you.”
My heart sinks. I was so hoping for Lily.
“What do they want?” I ask him.
“To deliver something, moron.”
“Deliver what?”
“I’ve only got one nerve left, and you’re getting on it.”
Ignoring him, I repeat, “Deliver what?”
“A piano.”
A piano is not as good as Lily herself, but it’s the next best thing. “Thanks, Adam. Send them up.”
We’re surprised that the upright piano the deliverymen carry into my apartment is made of mirror. We admire it, while they place it in the spot I indicate by the window.