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Two by Two(49)

By:Nicholas Sparks


"Sure," I said. "Let's go."

I led him back to the table. Despite the alcohol he'd consumed, he  didn't seem affected at all. Instead, he sat quietly, adding nothing to  the conversation. He didn't mention the death of his father to anyone  else at the table, and an hour later, I drove him back to his apartment.

He went home on Sunday, just as he'd told me he would. And though we were friends, I never saw or heard from him again.





"Hold on," Marge said. After I dropped London off at school on Tuesday  morning, she'd come straight to my house, where we sat at the kitchen  table. "So she just …  left?"

"Last night," I said.

"Did she at least say she was sorry?"

"I don't remember." I shook my head. "I can't even …  um …  I mean …  I … "

I couldn't keep my thoughts straight; my roiling emotions-shock and  fear, disbelief and anger-had me veering from one extreme to the next.  Though I knew I'd done it, I couldn't remember driving London to school  only a few minutes earlier; the drive had been consigned to nothingness.

"Your hands are shaking," Marge said.

"Yeah …  I'm okay." Trailing off, I took a long breath. "Shouldn't you be at work? I can scramble up some eggs."

Marge would tell me later that I got up from the table and went to the  fridge; as soon as I pulled it open, I must have decided I needed coffee  instead. I went to the coffee cabinet and then realized I should  probably get cups out for Marge and me first. But I must have thought I  still needed coffee so I set the cups beside the coffeemaker. She  watched as I went to the fridge and pulled out the eggs before returning  them to the same location. She said I then wandered to the pantry and  came out with a bowl and …          

     



 

"How about I make breakfast?" she suggested, rising from the table.

"Huh?"

"Have a seat."

"Don't you need to go to work?"

"I've decided that I'm taking the day off." She reached for her cell  phone. "Sit down. I'll be back in minute. I just have to tell my boss."

As I took my seat, I was struck anew by the realization that Vivian had  left me. That she was in love with her boss. She was gone. I watched  Marge open the door to the back patio.

"Where are you going?"

"I'm going to call my boss."

"Why are you calling your boss?"





Marge stayed with me all day. She picked up London from school and also  brought her to and from her piano lesson. Liz came by after her last  appointment, and together they not only made dinner, but kept London  entertained and helped her get ready for bed. It wasn't often that her  aunties came by to play, and London was over the moon from the extra  attention.

Again, it would be Marge who would tell me this. Like the drive to  school, I wouldn't be able to remember it. The only thing I really  remember was watching the clock and waiting for Vivian to call,  something she never did.





The next morning, after sleeping less than three hours, I crawled out of  bed feeling almost hungover, with all my nerves on edge. It was a  monumental effort to shower and shave, something I'd neglected the day  before. Nor had I eaten much-only a few bites at breakfast and  dinner-but the thought of food was inconceivable.

Marge handed me a cup of coffee as soon as soon as I entered the  kitchen, then started loading a plate. "Take a seat," she said. "You  need something in your stomach."

"What are you doing here?"

"What does it look like? I came by this morning to make sure you had something to eat."

"I didn't hear you knock."

"I didn't," she said. "After you went to bed, I borrowed your house key. I hope you don't mind."

"It's fine," I said. Raising the mug, I took a sip but the coffee tasted  wrong, off somehow. Despite the tantalizing aromas, my stomach remained  knotted. Nonetheless I pulled out my chair at the table and plopped  down. She set a plate in front of me, piled high with eggs, bacon, and  toast.

"I don't think I can eat," I offered.

"Too bad," she said. "You're going to eat, even if I have to tie you to the chair and feed you myself."

Too worn out to argue, I forced down a few bites; strangely, every bite  seemed a little easier than the last, but I still finished less than  half of it.

"She left me."

"I know," Marge said.

"She didn't want to try to work it out."

"I know."

"Why? What did I do wrong?"

Marge took a puff from her inhaler, buying time, and fully aware that  casting blame or heaping criticism on Vivian would only heighten my  emotional turmoil.

"I don't think you did anything wrong. It's just that relationships are hard, and both people have to want them to work."

As true as the statement was, I felt no relief when she said it.





"Are you sure you don't want me to stay with you today?" Marge asked.

"I can't ask you to take another day off," I said. Eating seemed to have  had a mildly stabilizing effect on my emotional state. I still wasn't  great, mind you. Not even close. The emotional surges may not have been  the tidal waves of yesterday, but they were still in the rogue wave  category, the kind that sank the Andrea Gail in the film The Perfect  Storm. I felt wildly off balance, but hoped that I could still handle  the basics. Get London to school and back. Dance class. Order pizza for  dinner. I knew I wouldn't have the mental or emotional energy for  anything else; even reading the paper or vacuuming were way beyond my  capabilities. My goal was simply to stay upright and take care of my  daughter.

Marge didn't seem convinced. "I'm going to call and check on you today. More than once."

"Okay," I agreed, but I knew there was part of me that was afraid to be  alone. What if I simply broke into pieces as soon as she left? Or  shattered, like the rest of my world.

Vivian had left me.

She was in love with someone else.

I was a terrible husband, worthless, and I had failed.

I disappointed her one too many times, and now I was alone.

Oh, my God, I thought, as soon as Marge closed the door behind her. I'm alone.

I'm going to end up dying alone.





While London was at school, I walked. I paced from one end of the house  to the other and back again; I walked the streets of my neighborhood for  hours. Questions about Vivian smashed into one another like endless  battering rams. Was she in Atlanta or in another city? Was she taking  the day off to set up the apartment or at the office? I wondered what  she was doing-I imagined her using an earpiece as she spoke on the phone  in a corner office, or hurrying down the hall carrying a stack of  papers, the office I envisioned shifting from sleek and modern to stuffy  and formal. I wondered whether Spannerman was with her; I wondered  whether she was laughing beside him or at her desk with her head in her  hands. I checked my cell phone constantly, hoping to hear from her,  watching for texts or missed calls. I brought the phone everywhere. I  wanted to hear her voice telling me that she'd made a mistake and that  she wanted to come home. I wanted her to tell me that she still loved  me. I wanted her to ask me to forgive her, and in my heart, I knew that I  wouldn't hesitate. I still loved her; the thought of life without her  was incomprehensible.         

     



 

All the while, I continued to wonder what I had done wrong. Was it  quitting my job? Was it that I'd gained a little weight? Was it that I  had worked too much, prior to quitting my job? And when did things start  going wrong? When did I become disposable? How could she leave us? How  could she leave London? Did Vivian intend to take her to Atlanta?

The final question was the worst of all, too much to contemplate, and  after finally returning to the house, I was exhausted. I knew I should  nap, but as soon as I lay down, my mind began to race. Marge called  three times, and I realized I had yet to tell my parents what had  happened, but I still didn't want to believe it.

I wanted this to be a dream.

In midafternoon, I picked up London while my internal storm continued to  rage. She asked for ice cream, and though the request felt impossibly  taxing, I somehow made it to Dairy Queen. I also, somehow, got her to  dance class on time.

I went for a walk while London was at class. I'm not a strong man. I  paced to the end of the strip mall. When I reached it, tears had begun  to blur my vision and all at once, I was standing by myself with  shoulders heaving, my face in my hands.





"When's Mommy coming home?" London asked me. There was a box of pizza on  the table and I set my slice of pizza aside. I'd finished half of it.  "I don't know, sweetheart. I haven't talked to her," I said. "But as  soon as I find out, I'll let you know."

If she thought my answer odd, she didn't show it. "Did I tell you that Bodhi and me found a baby turtle at recess?"