July 5, 1953
“AND NOW, ” Claire said. “What of us?”
She and Will had sat in silence for long minutes,
looking out at the water, the boats streaming silently through the
harbor, passing one another smoothly, like toy boats in a child’s
bathtub. It started to sprinkle slightly. It had taken great effort
to ask and she could not bring herself to look at him. She put her
hands in her lap and cupped them together primly.
“You don’t need me,” he said slowly. “I’ve said it
before and it’s truer than ever. I’m a liability now.”
Her first reaction: automatic withdrawal. Then she
realized, with Will’s new release came uncertainty: he had lived
too long with his secrets and now that they had been poured out, he
was likely feeling empty.
“I don’t need you,” she echoed his words. How
porous he seemed, how he always slipped through her grasp. Even in
their most intimate moments, in bed, his face hovering over hers,
intense with passion, he was never fully there. Now she understood
why: he had always been with another.
Another unbidden memory: Will, lifting the strands
of her hair as she lay beneath him, letting the fine gold slip
through his fingers, his face oddly distant. “Gold,” he had said.
“I love hair the color of metals: gold, bronze, even silver. The
gold and bronze will turn silver eventually, yes?” The closest he
ever got to saying the word love to her. It stung, suddenly.
She had turned away, buried her face in the pillow. In bed, she was
always shy around him, afraid that she would say something she
would regret later.
“You deserve better, you know,” she said, trying to
save what, she didn’t know. “You can live your life without always
regretting.”
“You are trying to be kind but you don’t
understand,” he said.
“It’s not kindness,” she said.
He didn’t reply.
“You always tell me to be strong, but you’re never
strong yourself. When we first met, you told me I should take the
opportunity to become something else, to transcend what I had been
given. You can’t do that yourself. You are mired in the past and
determined to be unhappy.” She had never seen so clearly before.
Anger swept through her—unexpected—clarifying even more. “You
cannot let go, and you are sinking. And you pretended to be so
strong!” A feeling as if she had been duped, taken under false
pretenses. The man she had loved was a mere shell. And she felt
something more, unwelcome: a feeling of pity, fatal to
passion.
“And I told you to go, don’t bother with me,” he
said, also angry now. He just wanted to be left alone. But she
wouldn’t leave him without trying to salvage something.
“Why did you come to me?” she asked. “You changed
my life. You didn’t like me, you said. What was it? Were you
bored?” She shot the last word at him, an accusatory arrow.
“You were pure,” he said, trying to explain. “You
weren’t like the others. You had your prejudices and silly ideas,
but you were open, willing to change. And I hadn’t minded being
alone. But you came along . . .”
“And you were the great opener of my eyes, the wise
and . . .”
“That’s not fair,” he said. “That is beneath you. I
never looked at another woman until you came along. But it felt
wrong, as if I were betraying Trudy, who I had betrayed in so many
ways already.”
“You are wasting your life,” she said. Rain had wet
his hair so it hung in jagged spikes down his forehead. He made no
effort to wipe away the water running down his face. He looked so
defeated.
She was cruel, finally. “You are a coward.”
How was this the man she had changed her life for?
It seemed inconceivable.
“And you are simple,” he said fiercely. “And naïve.
To think that you can just leave the past behind, like shutting a
door.”
“You won’t even look at me!” she cried. “You won’t
give me even that. You’ve always been mean with your attention, so
measured.” She looked down at herself. She had dressed with care
this morning, mindful of the impression she wanted to give: quiet,
not reproachful, confident. This had translated into a knee-length
navy cotton-voile dress with covered buttons all down the front, a
few decorative pleats: tailored, not fussy, freshly washed hair
held back with a navy satin headband. She tamped down the word that
kept rising to the surface of her consciousness: fool,
fool.
“I am telling you that it doesn’t need to be like
this,” she said. Her mother’s voice suddenly in her head: “Chasing
a man, are you? Shame!” Her face turned scarlet despite herself.
She waved her hand in the air, almost unconsciously, to dismiss her
mother’s presence.
“Do you know?” he asked, fiercely. “Do you know
what it’s like to have your life unravel because of something you
failed to do?” He stood up. “It haunts you like nothing
else.”
“So you give up,” she said in a low voice.
“Sometimes,” he said, “you don’t have a choice in
how you lead your life. Please stop before I say more things that I
will regret later.”
“You should know about regret,” she said. “It is
what you have made your life about.”
They sat, furious now, their anger running clear
through them like a solvent. It washed away their short past and
allowed them to wipe it clean.
He got up and walked away. She didn’t call after
him.