“You go ahead,” her father insisted. “I can wait.”
She shook her head. Now there would be no reason to take the phone into the other room. She was caught in her lie.
“Why don’t we talk about it during the parent-teacher conference tomorrow,” Josie said into the phone. “What time are you coming by? I have it written somewhere-”
“Can you go home for lunch?” Simon whispered. “I’ll stop by then. Brady and I fly out at three.”
“Noon it is, then. Thanks very much, Mr. Reed.”
She hung up the phone.
“You’re very good at what you do,” her father said. “It seems like it wasn’t very long ago that I might have been having that conversation with one of your teachers.”
No, Josie thought. You would never have had that conversation.
She walked over and kissed him again.
“Thanks for coming, Dad. I’ve missed you.”
“You could visit once in a while. It wouldn’t kill you.”
“I have so much work on the weekends.”
“You bring it with you. I can cook you a dinner once in a while. Where’s that wine? I couldn’t find it.”
Josie found a bottle of wine in her cupboard and opened it. Her father never would have had an affair. He was such a good husband, such a loyal man. But Simon had told her that he had never imagined that he would slip out the back door and take another woman to bed. “I’m a good man,” he had told her. Had he stopped being a good man when he fell in love with her?
She poured wine into their glasses. She handed her father a glass and took a sip of hers. An evening with her dad instead of her lover. She wasn’t disappointed. It was a chance to catch her breath.
“Sit down and let me get this meal together,” she told him.
He sat at the table and watched her. She put the pasta in the boiling water, then set the small table. She already had the sauce made-a simple tomato sauce with herbs from her garden. She tossed the salad with some vinaigrette.
“Look at you,” her dad said. “You would have made your mom proud.”
Josie smiled. She had often thought of that: Mom should see me cook. Mom should see me teach. But when she began her affair with Simon she no longer wished her mother alive to watch over her. When she thought about her mother now, she felt a hot blast of shame.
“Tell me what’s new, Dad. How’s the store?”
“Same old,” he said. “Nothing changes anymore. One of these days I’ll sell out and move to Palm Springs.”
“No you won’t,” Josie said. “You’d leave me?”
“Maybe you’ll visit more in Palm Springs.”
“Hey, guess what. I’m going to Paris!”
The timer rang and she tested the pasta, then poured it into the colander. She heated it with the sauce for a moment while she concocted her lie.
“You remember Whitney? My friend from college? We’re going together for six days.”
“You can afford something like that on your teacher’s salary?”
“Whitney got a great deal. I’m really happy about it. Paris!”
“Yeah. Good for you, Josie. You bring me back one of those berets the old men wear. I’d look good in one of those.”
Josie smiled. “You’d look great in one of those.”
She served them and sat across from her father.
“You really going to move to Palm Springs?”
“Who knows? I’m thinking about it. There’s a lady I know who’s got a place down there. She wants me to visit.”
“A lady?”
“You never heard of a lady before?”
“A girlfriend lady?”
“It’s not impossible.”
“Dad. That’s great. Since when?”
“Since never. I said it’s not impossible.”
“Tell me about the lady.”
“Somebody I met at bridge. A nice lady.”
“I’m glad, Dad. I’m really glad.”
“So what’s wrong with you? Your old man can meet a lady and you can’t bring home a boyfriend?”
“I’ll bring home a boyfriend, Dad. I promise.”
“Yeah?”
“I don’t know. It’s very complicated. There’s a man I like. I don’t know.”
“What’s not to know?”
“Like I said, it’s complicated.”
Her father put his wineglass down on the table. He pushed his chair back and stood up.
“He’s married,” he said, his voice low.
“I didn’t say that.”
“Love isn’t complicated. Married men are complicated.”
“Forget I said anything.”
“Your mother would be very upset with you.”
“Don’t bring her into this.”
“I’m not hungry.”
“Dad. Sit down.”
Her father walked into the other room. Josie was furious with herself for saying something-there was no reason to talk about Simon. She got up and followed her father into the living room.
He was standing by the front door as if considering his escape. He gazed through the window; his face was dark and brooding.
“This is the day your mother was diagnosed,” he said quietly, as if he weren’t even talking to her. “Eight years ago.”
“Oh,” Josie said weakly. She stood back, scared that if she went to him, he’d throw open the door and disappear.
“I went with her to the doctor’s appointment. We thought it was nothing-some swelling in her ankles, a little discomfort, nothing important. But you know how much she hated the doctor.”
His hands hung limply at his sides. He looked helpless, lost, as if what happened eight years ago happened over and over again.
“She went in to the appointment and I stayed in the waiting room with all the ladies. Then the nurse came into the room and said, ‘The doctor will meet with you now.’ I knew everything I needed to know right then. I didn’t need him to say a word.”
“How was Mom?” Josie asked.
“Quiet. Scared. We sat in front of the doc’s desk in his fancy office and listened to him talk about surgery and chemo and new kinds of treatment. But right then I knew: I had lost her. I lost my world. I lost my life.”
There were tears running down his face. Josie swiped at her own face with the back of her hand.
“I’m sorry I was so far away,” she said.
“Oh, you did what you needed to do. What all kids do. We never blamed you for that.”
“Come have dinner with me, Dad.”
“Eight years go by. And there’s still all these feelings I have. Like I can’t gather them up and put them away in a box.”
Josie walked over to her father. He turned toward her and let her hold him.
After a moment he stepped away. “No married men,” he said.
“Who said anything about a married man?” she told him.
Nico and Josie take the elevator down from the top of the Eiffel Tower.
“Let’s walk along the Seine,” Nico says.
“This is the first day I have spent back in the world,” Josie tells him as they head toward the river. First they walk along the wide boulevard at the side of the road; below them, to their left, is the Seine and across it, the Grand Palais. Farther up is the Louvre. Then a stairwell takes them to a lower path, one that brushes the river and protects them from the street traffic and the mad crush of pedestrians.
“You have been hiding?”
“Hiding?” Josie says, considering the word. “No, there’s no place to hide. I try the bed, with the covers pulled high, but even then, it finds me and knocks me out.”
“Sadness?”
“I wish it were sadness. That seems kinder than what I feel now. It’s a gut punch now. It’s a wallop of grief.”
“When your mother died…?” Nico lets the question trail off. “I’m sorry,” he says. “I’m asking too many questions.”
“You are,” Josie says. But she slides her hand around his arm and walks at his side with their arms linked together.
They’re quiet for a while. The clouds have darkened the sky and they hear thunder far off in the distance.
“When my mother died,” Josie says, “I remember thinking I was no longer a child. It all ended at once. I had just graduated from college, I was thousands of miles from home, and then she was gone. I floated for a while-it’s so different. This grief has me crawling on the earth; that time I was cut loose and I couldn’t ground myself. I had a lot of sex. Isn’t that odd? I slept with every boy I knew-old friends, new friends, passing acquaintances. I guess I was trying to feel something. Now I feel too much.”