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Authors: Barbara Delinsky

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BOOK: The Woman Next Door
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“I think Harry’s cool.”

“So do the twins.” His twin brothers were eight. “I tell them Harry flies through our woods on his broomstick. That keeps them from following me in there. Our woods are cool. They’re real. Harry’s not.” Sitting forward, he began resetting the checkers on the board. “About the CS requirement? I’d do peer counseling if I thought I could, but I can’t.”

“Why not?”

“I’m not good at talking.”

“Seems to me you talk with your friends.”

“They talk. I listen.”

“Well, there you go,” Amanda said in encouragement. “That’s what peer counseling’s about. Kids need to vent, and you’re a good listener.”

“Yeah, but sometimes I want to
say
things.”

“Like what?”

He raised unhappy eyes. “Like school sucks, like home sucks, like
baseball
sucks.”

“Baseball. I thought you liked baseball.” He had just come from practice. It must have been a rough one.

“I’d like it if I played, but I don’t. I sit on the bench all the time. Know how embarrassing that is? With all the kids watching? With my
parents
watching? Why do they have to come to games? They could miss one or two. I mean, my mom is
always
at school. Julie loves it, but what does she know? She’s only six.”

“Your mom does good stuff for the schools.”

“Know how embarrassing that is?”

“Actually,” Amanda said, taking a calculated risk, “I don’t. My parents were too busy fighting with each other to have the time or energy for either my school or me.”

Jordie lifted a shoulder. “Mine fight. They just do it when they think we can’t hear.”

Amanda made a noncommittal sound, but didn’t speak. Taking the moment’s space to gather his thoughts, Jordie went off in a direction that was slightly different, but clearly upmost in his mind.

“And even if we can’t hear, we can see,” he said. “Mom hardly ever smiles anymore. She doesn’t plan fun things like she used to. Like sleepovers for all our friends.” He caught himself. “I mean, it’s not like I want those anymore, I’m too old, but Julie and the twins aren’t. Mom used to have twenty of us over at once with popcorn and pizza and videos, and I didn’t even care if the little kids were bugging me and my friends, because that was all part of it, y’know?”

His enthusiasm gave way to a somber silence, then anger. “Now she just pokes her head in my room asking nosy questions.”

“Fuck it,” came a high, nasal voice.

Amanda frowned at the neon green parrot in a cage at the end of the room. “Hush up, Maddie.”

Jordie stared at the bird. “She’s always saying that. How come they let you keep her?”

“She only swears for kids. She knows better when it comes to Mr.
Edlin or any of the teachers. She’s perfectly polite when they’re in here.”

Like checkers, Maddie was an icebreaker. Some students stopped by daily for a month to give the bird treats before they felt comfortable enough to talk with Amanda.

“She’s a good bird,” Amanda cooed in the direction of the cage.

“I love you,” Maddie replied.

“She flips?” Jordie asked. “Just like that? Is she a good guy or a bad guy?”

“A good guy. Definitely. Good guys can say bad things when they’re upset. Maddie learned to swear from someone who used to chase her with a broom, which was how I came to adopt her. She knows what anger sounds like. She gets upset when kids get upset, like you just did about baseball.”

“I wasn’t talking about baseball when she swore,” Jordie said.

No. He had been talking about his mother. But, of course, he knew that, which was why he was on his feet now, hoisting the backpack to his shoulder. Talking about parents was hard for kids like Jordie. Talking about feelings was even harder.

Jordie needed an outside therapist, someone who didn’t know his family. For that to happen, though, either he or one of his parents had to take the initiative. None of them was doing it, yet. So Amanda went out of her way to be there when Jordie came by. Unfortunately, she couldn’t make him stay. Before she could utter a word, he was out the door and tromping down the empty hall, lost again in whatever dark thoughts were haunting him.

Wait,
she wanted to say.
We can talk about it. We can talk about moms fighting with dads, how you feel about it, what you’re doing when you’re supposed to be studying, what you’re thinking when you’re blue. I’m free. I can talk. I can talk as long as you want. I have to keep my mind busy.

But he was gone, and as they had been doing all day, her eyes went to the desk and Graham’s picture. It was in a neat slate frame, his smile beaming at her through his trim beard. It was a face that many a female entering this room had remarked upon. Graham O’Leary was an icebreaker, too.

She had to call him. He would be waiting to hear. But she didn’t know anything yet, and she might not for hours.

Besides, lately it seemed that the only thing she and Graham were about was having a baby—and, oh, did she feel the pressure of that. He had done his part successfully, and more than once. Her body was the problem. Of course, he didn’t say that in as many words, but he didn’t need to. She felt his impatience.

But what more could she do? She had followed Emily’s instructions to the letter—had eaten well, rested well, exercised in the most healthy and normal of ways, except for today. Loath to do anything that might bring on her period, she was moving as little as possible.

It was nonsense, of course. Normal physical movement wouldn’t wreck a normal pregnancy. At this point, though, she was desperate. She hadn’t left her office since lunch, and though she might have liked to use the bathroom, she quelled the urge. As a diversionary measure, she sat back in the sofa, checked her watch, and thought about Quinn Davis. It was five-thirty She had told the boy she would be in her office until six, and so she would be.

His notes unsettled her. They had come by e-mail, the first sent early that morning saying, “I need to talk to you, but it’s private. Is that okay?”

“Private is definitely okay,” Amanda had written back. “What you say is between you and me. That’s the law. I’m free third period. Would that work?”

He hadn’t shown up during third period, but another e-mail arrived
during fourth. “Would my parents have to know that we met?”

“No,” Amanda replied. “That’s part of the confidentiality rule. They wouldn’t know unless you sign a form saying it’s okay. I have a free half hour right after school, but if you have to be at baseball practice, we could make it later. I’ll stay until six. Will that work?”

She hadn’t heard back. Nor had she heard footsteps in the hall to suggest that Quinn had come while Jordie was there, and she’d been listening. Something was up with Quinn. Her instincts told her so, and it had nothing to do with the fact that he approached her by e-mail. Many students did that, precisely because it was more private. She often suggested meeting times, often never heard back, and other than keeping an eye on the student or perhaps sending a follow-up note, there was nothing she could do. She couldn’t force the issue.

But Quinn Davis wasn’t her usual case. He was a star. In addition to being sophomore class president, he was a peer counselor, high scorer of the varsity basketball team the past winter, and now he was the wunderkind of the baseball team. Two older brothers, both leaders at Woodley High, were currently at Princeton and West Point. Their parents were local activists, often in the papers, forever in Hartford lobbying for one cause or another.

Amanda wondered if Quinn would show and, if so, what he would say. It could be that he wanted to tell Amanda about a student who needed help; part of the point of the peer leadership program was to identify problem students before they exploded. Student referrals were responsible for easily a third of the students she regularly saw. But she doubted that was the case here, with the student insisting on confidentiality from his own parents.

Slipping off her shoes, Amanda folded her legs beside her. She was tired emotionally; that was a given. She was also physically
tired, though if she dared think that it might be the earliest sign of pregnancy, she got a nervous knot in her belly. In any event, she was grateful that her job allowed for casual dress. Allowed for? Demanded. The students had to perceive her as both professional and approachable, no mean feat for someone like Amanda, whose small size and wayward blond curls made her look more like she was twenty-five than thirty-five. The challenge was to appear more sophisticated, yet not formidable.

Today’s outfit worked. It was a plum-colored blouse and pants, both in a soft rayon.

A noise came from the hall—a muted sound that could have been an anguished shout—then silence. Fearing that it was Quinn and that something was terribly wrong, Amanda jumped up from the sofa and went to the door. Down the hall, immobile and alert with his mop protruding from a pail-on-wheels, was the janitor.

“Heeeere’s Johnny,” sang out Maddie from the depths of her office.

Amanda let out a breath. “Mr. Dubcek.” The man was white-haired and stooped, eighty if he was a day, but he refused to retire. He was remembered not only by parents of current students, but by grandparents as well. That gave him clout in the respect department. He was never spoken of as Johann, always Mr. Dubcek— except for Maddie, but then, Maddie didn’t know about respect. She only knew that the old man fed her and cleaned out her cage and took her every night to his small apartment in the basement of the school.

“I was listening for voices,” the janitor told Amanda in a rusty voice. “I’d’a gone away if you had someone in there. I didn’t want to interfere.”

“No one’s here,” she said with a smile, but the smile faded when, standing now, giving gravity its due, she felt an unwelcome rush.

Heart pounding, she went down the hall to the lavatory. Well before she closed the stall door and lowered those soft plum pants, she knew. In that instant, pummeled by a dozen emotions, not the least of which was a profound sense of loss, her mind closed down. Sinking onto the toilet, she put her elbows on her thighs and her face in her hands and began to cry.

She must have been there a while, because the next thing she knew, there was a loud knock on the outer door and the janitor’s frightened call: “Mrs. O’Leary? Are you all right?”

Mrs. O’Leary.
Ah, the irony of that. Professionally, she had always been Amanda Carr. She had surely introduced herself to the janitor that way four years before. At the same time, though, she had introduced him to Graham, who was helping her set up her office. She had been Mrs. O’Leary to the proper old gentleman ever since.

And what was wrong with being Mrs. O’Leary? On a normal day, nothing at all. She was proud to be married to Graham. She had always believed that once they had kids she would use O’Leary more often than Carr.

Once they had kids.
If
they had kids. And that was what was wrong with being Mrs. O’Leary today. Without the kids, did she have a right to the name?

Tears came again.

“Mrs. O’Leary?” the janitor called again.

Sniffling, she wiped the tears with the heels of her hands. “I’m fine,” she called in an upbeat, if nasal, voice. “Be right out.”

After dealing with necessities in the stall, she washed her hands and pressed a damp paper towel to her eyes. A headache was starting to build over the right one, but she didn’t have the wherewithal to pamper it here, much less the strength to deal with whatever was ailing Quinn Davis. Praying that the boy would not show up, she returned to her office, repaired her face in a hand mirror, shut
down her computer, locked up her files, and, waving at the janitor’s distant figure on her way down the hall, left school.

***

Graham considered prolonging the trip home. There were places he could stop, ten minutes here, ten there, giving Amanda more time to call. But the suspense was too much. He kept the truck on the highway and his foot on the gas.

The phone rang. His heart began to pound.

“Hi?” he answered as much in question as greeting, but it wasn’t Amanda. It was a woman who owned a real estate firm and had hired him to redo the office grounds. The job was small, the potential large. The woman’s clientele was high-end. If she liked what he did, she would recommend his work, and while he had plenty to keep him busy, he always welcomed more. Lately, given the tension between Amanda and him, his work was his salvation.

“I was just wondering when I’ll be seeing you,” she said warmly.

He drove with his left hand while the right opened his little black book. “You’re on my call list. I’ll have your plans ready by the first of the week.” He flipped several pages, darting glances at each. “How does a week from today sound? Say, four?”

“Perfect. Next Tuesday at four. See you then.”

Graham barely ended the call when the phone rang again. Again, his heart began to pound, but it wasn’t Amanda this time, either. It was his brother Joe.

“Any news?”

Graham let out a breath. “Nah. I’m headed home.”

“Mom was asking.”

“I’ll bet she was. I have to tell you, there are times when I wish I hadn’t said anything to anyone.”

“We asked.”

So they had. The questions had started one month into his marriage, and they hadn’t stopped. In hindsight, he should have said that he and Amanda didn’t want children, and would they please bug off
.
Having his entire family know what they were going through was nearly as humiliating as jerking off into a jar. O’Leary men didn’t have to do things like that. Hell, Joe had recently had his fifth child, and Graham suspected he and Christine weren’t done yet.

“She’s beginning to despair,” Joe said now of their mother, Dorothy. “Says she wants to see your kids before she dies.”

“She’s only seventy-seven.”

“She says she’s growing frail.”

Graham felt a cursed helplessness. “What more does she think I should do?”

“She says this is her last wish.”


Joe.
Come
on.
This isn’t what I need right now.”

“I know. I’m just putting you on notice. She keeps saying it should have been Megan.”

BOOK: The Woman Next Door
2.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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