Which is how I found myself watching Tish’s image, trying not to focus on the increasing amount of time we now spent in communication with each other, how much of a fixture she’d become in my life so quickly.

Because something that felt this good couldn’t be wrong, could it?

And anything that might skip across my brain like a flat rock thrown sideways, well, we’d agreed not to say those things, to push them down.

So, no harm, no foul.

When I got the meeting invite, I felt a frisson of…something else I pushed down. But I certainly dressed more carefully than usual that day. I wore my favorite shirt. I got a haircut I told myself I needed anyway. I gave myself an attentive shave. And when Claire said something about me looking good at breakfast, I pushed the stab of guilt down too.

The funny thing was, neither of us spoke about it in advance. I mean Tish and I. We’d been debating about best movies off and on for a couple days, and when I got to the office there was an email from her containing the case for High Fidelity.

John Cusack while he was still hot. A seamless transition from book to movie. The Beta Band. “Is that Peter fucking Frampton?” John Cusack while he was still hot. Need I go on?

Is the John Cusack point supposed to be determinative for me?

Not sure. Are you a guy who can appreciate male hotness from an aesthetic point of view?

I’m about three on the Kinsey scale.

Interesting that you’d go there.

?

Just that you’d take that as a sexual orientation question.

It wasn’t?

Men.

That’s not an explanation.

Sure. Right. Now why don’t you love this movie? Lack of light sabers?

I laughed out loud and glanced at the Han Solo figurine on my desk, which was a present from Seth for my last birthday.

I don’t know what you’re talking about.

It’s amazing how convincing you are.

Anyway, I have this meeting…

Right. Me too.

I sat staring at the screen, waiting for some acknowledgment that my meeting was with her, wondering why neither of us had brought it up.

Whether our silence was speaking for us.

Then my computer chimed, reminding me that I had a meeting with Underhill, Patricia, in five minutes.

I stood, looking around my desk for something to bring with me for luck.

My eyes came to rest on the Han Solo figurine. I reached out and tucked it into my pocket.

I think I’m falling, I thought.

I know, little Han Solo replied.


When Dunn the Corporate Drone finished his safety stupidity, Tish resumed her lecture. As I bent my head over my notes, I tried to rid myself of the disappointment that our meeting wasn’t just the two of us. But although we weren’t alone, I felt acutely aware of her presence. Like how you do sometimes in a crowd of people. How you can tell exactly where they are at any given moment, even though you haven’t looked in a while. Like some thread connected us.

Two hours later, the meeting was over and I looked up from my doodle/notes to meet Tish’s eyes again. I smiled and started to wave at her, stopping in the middle as it struck me that it might come off as weird to my colleagues. She nodded her head and clicked a button, and then she was gone.

We all stood and made our separate ways out of the room. Marketing Guy was talking to someone I didn’t know about the list Tish should be on, if she wasn’t already. I smiled, but I felt restless, like there was somewhere else I was supposed to be, something else I was supposed to be doing.

I got back to my desk, and there was the usual host of emails waiting for me, but also one from Tish. The Re was:

Strange?

I clicked it open.

Well, that was strange, she had written.

Strange good?

A moment, two, then ping!

Strange good.

We used the conference room a lot.

CHAPTER 22

It’s Not What It Looks Like

I wake up next to Seth with an almighty crick in my body. When I look over at him, I suppress a laugh. He’s fallen asleep with the book he was reading across the bridge of his nose, his book light still on. I guess it’s a measure of how tired we both were that we slept despite the cramped quarters and illumination.

I lift the book from Seth’s face as gently as I can and leave his room, letting him sleep in, sleep yesterday off, if that’s possible.

Beth’s already up and downstairs, sitting at the kitchen table, working away on her laptop. Amazingly, there doesn’t seem to be anyone else here, only their detritus, which I’m sure my mother will be here to start cleaning up as soon as she gets my father out the door.

“There’s coffee,” Beth says, not looking up.

I put the book down on the table and help myself to a large cup, keeping it black, though I generally don’t drink it that way. Yesterday feels like it’s clinging to my brain, and Beth’s black tar might scrub it away.

“You don’t have to stay,” I say to Beth, “if you should be getting back.”

“Ha!”

“What?”

She grins at me. “You don’t really mean that. At least…I hope you don’t.”

“I don’t, but I’d understand if you have to. If you’re needed elsewhere.”

“I can’t think of anywhere else where I’m needed more than here.”

“Are you trying to make me cry?”

“Little bit.”

I reach for a Kleenex. “That’s not really a challenge these days, you know.”

“How about making you laugh?”

“That might be harder.”

“I’ll work on that.” She picks up the book from the table. “What’s this?”

“What? Oh, it’s the book Seth got that poem he read from. Jeff had it.”

Beth starts flipping through it and I read the title again. Just This Side of Childhood by Zoey Underhill. Why did Jeff have this book? Underhill, Underhill…

“Who’s Tish?” Beth asks.

“She’s…she worked with Jeff. She was here yesterday.”

“Why would she give him this? Were they good friends?”

“I don’t…I don’t think so. She gave it to him?”

Beth holds the inside cover of the book open to me. Written on it, under a date from three weeks ago, are the words To Jeff, I’m a proud mama! Tish.

“This must be her daughter’s book.”

“Okay.”

“What?”

“Nothing. Forget it.”

“Beth.”

“Don’t you think it’s…weird that she’d give it to him?”

“They worked together. Maybe she gave them to a bunch of people?”

She stays silent.

“You don’t think—”

She shakes her head. “No. I really don’t. I’m sure it’s fine.”

“But that might explain a few things. Like how distracted he’s been. And I found her crying outside—”

“No,” she says firmly. “Don’t go there.”

“Why? Rick did it. Why not Jeff?”

“Yeah, my asshole ex-husband cheated on me, but it was only a one-time thing. It’s not like he was leaving me for her or anything. He only told me because he wanted forgiveness.”

“As if.”

“I know, right? Only…”

“What?”

“When he’d moved out and I’d calmed down, I missed him. And I got to thinking that I wished I didn’t know about it. If he could’ve kept it to himself, then we’d probably still be together.”

“Why are you telling me this?”

“Because sometimes it’s better to leave well enough alone.”

“You really think that?”

“Yeah, I do.” She rises, taking her dishes to the sink. “I guess I should get started on this mess.”

“You don’t have to. I’m sure Mom…”

“I asked Mom and Dad to cool their heels for the day. For the weekend actually.”

“And they agreed?”

“Yup. I think there’s some big golf tournament on or something.”

“The Masters.”

“The whatsit?”

“The Masters? One of the four majors…”

She smiles. “Jeff knowledge?”

“Yeah. I bet he’s pissed as hell that he’s missing it.”

“You mean, up in heaven.”

“Ha, ha.”

She hugs me quickly. “I’m only poking fun. Besides, if there really is a heaven, I’m sure they have cable.”


Amazingly enough, my parents keep their word (or the golf is so riveting they’re sufficiently distracted; either scenario is just as likely), and it’s only the three of us for the weekend. Even Tim seems to have fallen off the face of the earth, but since that’s hardly new, I don’t remark on it.

Monday rolls around as Mondays always do, and it’s back to work for real now. Not that I couldn’t take more time off if I needed to, but Playthings made me feel more like myself the other day. It always has.

I get there in time for morning drop-off, marveling, as always, at the long line of SUVs waiting to disgorge the tiniest of cargoes. Our parents had a Ford LTD growing up, and the backseat was just big enough for Beth and me to have to lean slightly to land a really good blow on the other during the cross-country family vacations my parents insisted on taking. If ever there were two people (or four, for that matter) who didn’t need to be cooped up in a four-door sedan, we were those people. But my parents have never been the most self-aware of couples.

Outside my office, Mandy Holden’s got LT firmly by the hand, the sweater of her pale blue twin-set knotted over her shoulders.

“Oh, Claire, hello. Great to see you.” She says this like the last time she saw me wasn’t at my husband’s wake.

“You too, Mandy. What can I do for you?”

She holds her finger to her lips, then points down at LT, who, as far as I can tell, is plotting how to get the Fruit Roll-Up out of Sara Kindle’s little paw and couldn’t care less about whatever it is his mother wants to keep quiet.

But I nod and motion for her to enter my office, our pantomime confirming that she’ll come see me when she’s done depositing LT in the toddler room and giving whatever today’s instructions are to the way-too-patient staff.

The message light on my phone is still blinking away like it was last week. I can’t believe it still has the energy. I dial into my voicemail and skip through the messages. All sympathy, all the time. It occurs to me after I erase the tenth one that I should be keeping a list for the thank-you cards my mother’s going to start bugging me about writing any day now, but I can’t be bothered. Instead, I hit the buttons to erase them all; if someone wants to say something other than how sorry they are, they’ll call back.

Mandy enters my office as I hang up the phone.

“So, um, sorry, again, for your loss.”

“Thank you. What’s up?”

“We haven’t found a way to tell him yet, but it’s important that the staff know, and you’ll probably have to implement some new food guidelines—”

“What are you talking about?”

“LT’s gluten sensitivity, of course.”

“LT has celiac disease?”

“Of course not! It’s only a sensitivity. I told you on Friday.”

She sounds genuinely annoyed that I don’t remember this. As if something she told me after I put my husband in the ground should be top of mind, or in my mind at all.

“Right. Of course.”

“So you’ll make the changes?”

“No.”

“We’re talking about LT’s health here, Claire.”

“We went over this when you found out LT was allergic to pollen. We can’t implement a whole set of rules because of one child’s sensitivity. Not unless it’s life-threatening.”

“But—”

“LT’s not the only child who isn’t eating gluten. I’ll let the caregivers know and we’ll make sure he only eats what you provide him with, but that’s as far as we can go.”

She holds her enormous purse to her chest. “But on Friday you said—”

“You’re not seriously trying to hold her to something she said on Friday, are you?” Tim says from the doorway.

Mandy looks startled, then smiles brightly at Tim. “Well, I…No, I guess I understand. But, Claire, I want to continue to dialogue about this.”

“Why don’t we see how it goes this week and we’ll take it from there, all right?”

“Sounds reasonable to me,” Tim says.

“Oh, well, yes…” Mandy stands and I can see the blush creeping up her cheeks. Tim is throwing her off her game, but not completely. “And who are you?”