Lindsay

Haley and I crawl into her car without a word. I feel numb, if that’s possible when you’ve just been bludgeoned by a painful reality. I look back at the complex, thinking that someone else is in my place—physically and emotionally. I feel betrayed by my husband, and he’s not here to reassure me, which makes me want to scream. I need reassurance. I want proof that my life with Ron was not a lie. That he did this because it was best for me.

I know Haley wants to soothe me, and she’s searching for words, but every time she opens her mouth, she snaps it shut again and keeps driving. And it’s just as well. What’s she going to say? I’m sure Ron meant nothing by avoiding the topic of a Ron Jr. Or that he put his ex-wife in charge of all his major investment assets. How serious could it be? Someone else bearing his name means nothing. Someone else closing out the rest of his assets—nothing. Nothing, I tell you.

My heart is in my throat, and I question the last ten years of my life. “Why on earth wouldn’t he have mentioned Ron Jr., Haley? I mean, even if it wasn’t his son. Especially if it wasn’t his son!”

“You’re worrying over nothing, Linds. Ron loved you. I suppose we all have our secrets.”

“Are we supposed to? Within marriage?”

“You’re asking me?”

“I have the letter.”

“What letter?”

“The one Jane is looking for in the desk. I have it. Obviously, I emptied his desk before I gave it away. I thought the letter to Ron Jr. meant Ron hoped that I was pregnant. I thought he was writing a letter to our unborn son, hoping I’d name him Ron Jr. Now I find out, the name was already taken. What if I’d been pregnant, Haley?”

“You weren’t. And the world would survive two Ron Jr.’s. I once knew a guy who named his five sons Oscar.”

I just stare at her. “And?”

“That’s it. Just a guy who named his five sons Oscar and without middle names. So I’m saying there could be two Ron Jrs.”

“But there aren’t!”

“Well, yeah. Unless you’ve got some DNA in a cryogenics lab somewhere.”

“Okay, I know you are trying to help me, but could you relent on the bad soap opera ideas?”

“Suit yourself.”

“I just realized that he left the Pacific Palisades house to Ron Jr. We’d discussed it, and I said I didn’t want the house, but I never thought he’d leave it to some stranger, bearing his name.”

“He must not have wanted to hurt you.”

“Well, obviously, I was going to find out, Haley. I mean, he left our house to the boy.”

“The boy? How old is he?”

“Haley! You’re not helping I don’t know how old he is!”

“I just meant that it’s not like he’s a small child. Couldn’t you tell that from the letter? I trust you opened it.”

“I opened it. I thought it was so sweet that Ron would write a letter to his future son.”

“Future. Past. What’s the difference? You didn’t want the house, and Ron got rid of it.”

“I’m not even going to dignify that with an answer.”

“Probably for the best,” Haley says.

“I’m telling you, Ron just wouldn’t have abandoned his son. Even if it wasn’t his biological child, he was named after him, and I know Ron. He loved duty. Lived by it. Stonewall Brindle, you might have called him.”

“But you also knew he would have told you that he had a child named after him.”

“I know you didn’t just say that.”

“You’re telling me you kept nothing from Ron?”

“Whose side are you on?”

“Lindsay, we don’t have to go wedding dress shopping.” Haley announces in the sacrificial way that seems to come so easy to her. “You can’t possibly be in the mood, and I completely understand.”

“I’m always in the mood to shop!” I say brightly. “Especially with you. I consider it my civic duty. My ministry, if you will. You’ve only got six months before this wedding. That’s an unacceptable amount of time to plan, and I want to keep the rhinestones to a minimum.” The words come out as confident as ever, but they’re hollow. “I have to have something to do.”

“You seem really shaken. I’m not used to seeing you this way. You’re always the one who handles everything.”

We stop at a stoplight, and I stare at her. She has way more faith in me than I’m worthy of and I feel another rush of guilt. Whatever strength I pretended to have was nothing more than false bravado. When I first met her at our Trophy Wives Club’s Bible Study, she was like a female Clint Eastwood, bent on revenge, but that, too, was only false bravado. “Haley, I don’t handle everything. I never did.”

“Ron probably didn’t want to hurt you, or he would have told you the whole truth. You’ve been through so much in the last year. And now this. An ex-wife and a mystery son who is inheriting the house. That’s shocking by Hollywood’s standards.” Haley shakes her head. “It’s not like that wouldn’t rattle someone, no matter how faithful. One thing I’m certain of: Ron loved your life together and everything you both planned for the future. You didn’t have an easy marriage, Lindsay, but you had a good marriage. Ron having Jane back now doesn’t negate that. He had to have a reason for bringing her here.”

I nod.

“Maybe he thought you two would have something in common, Lindsay.”

“Maybe.”

“Let’s get a coffee before we get started. We’re in no hurry.” Haley pats my hand on the center console. I stare at my wedding ring, wondering when it’s appropriate to take it off. Is it ever appropriate, considering?

“I thought you said there was a sale on seconds? Everything will be gone if we’re late. People may have camped out.” I inform her.

Haley shrugs. “They probably did. No biggie. I’ll find something.”

The fact is, she will. Haley is charmed. If I went to find a wedding dress, there would be nothing but strapless, size-zeros in pink satin. But Haley? She’ll find the perfect designer gown in her size without any effort at all, and most likely, she’ll get it for half-off. If I could just get her to improve her taste, she’d be set. She pulls her Mini into a parking place right in front of the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf. See? A parking place on the street in Bel Air. Charmed.

I, on the other hand…

“Haley, I really think we should head to the wedding shop,” I prompt. The last thing I want is any girl talk. I need time to process all of this. I need to read this letter.

“I’m not doing anything without caffeine. Without it, I might let you talk me into some simple sheath with no sparkle to it whatsoever and be a Glamour “do” and that scares the life out of me. If I want to sparkle like a pink party bulb on my big day, by golly, I’m going to. You’ll put me in something a Kennedy might wear. Oh no, we need to stop because I have to get me some power. I have to be able to stand firm against the natural-born stylist that is my best friend.”

“Haley, I want you to be married in what you want to be married in. I’m not going to try to talk you out of anything.” Even as I say it, I wonder if I can keep my opinions to myself. What a burden to be saddled with my mouth!

She flattens her smile. “Do I look like I’m a natural blonde? Born yesterday? You may have good intentions, but I know you.” She gets out of the car, and buttons up her white seersucker jacket (with red rhinestones on the lapels—I’m sorry to report they match her sandals.)

“Do you really need a jacket? It’s eighty degrees out.”

“The air-conditioning always gets me. Oh, but you’re right. It’s February. The air won’t be on too high.” She slinks out of the sleeves and tosses the short, springy blazer into the car. She straightens her shirt collar. Her rhinestone-studded shirt collar.

I drop my chin to my chest. “Just because you’re not married to Jay anymore, does that mean everything has to sparkle? You’re like a walking fishing lure. Restraint, Haley. A little restraint.”

“How else am I supposed to get noticed, standing next to your statuesque self?” she asks me.

“Good shoes?” I suggest. “And please. Don’t think I’m fooled by the compliment. You’re changing the subject.” I grin. If anyone can make me forget my circumstances, it’s good-natured Haley, under the constant sunbeam that brightens her path.

I grab a table while Haley stands in line for our order. We have a system. Whoever drives, pays. The passenger gets the table. It sounds strange, maybe slightly anal, but our choreography works for us. This is California, after all, and good espresso is a hard-won entity—even if there is a coffee shop on every corner. When you add in the ratio of espresso drinkers, it negates itself.

I drop my purse on Haley’s chair. I peruse the table tent, advertising all the fattening chocolate creations posing as coffee drinks, and mentally calculate how many miles Haley’d have to run to enjoy one, guilt-free. I wonder what the ratio is to one of Haley’s tubs o’ frosting. Is it more miles or fewer?

Looking up toward the window, I see him. It’s been years. Nine? Ten? Every muscle in my body goes lax, while the butterflies in my stomach soar to new heights. He looks exactly the same. He makes me feel exactly the same. Not a thing has changed. My heart aches to run out of my loneliness and into his arms, but reality hits me like a sledgehammer. I remain firmly planted in my chair, sliding the table tent and my handbag in front of me, while I peer around them, like I practiced as a hallway-stalking schoolgirl. For a moment, I’m lost in his rugged profile—his slightly crooked nose, the solid, angled jaw and that perfect chin. It’s amazing how seeing an old flame when you’re fresh from pain can negate every reason you broke up with him in the first place.

He watches Haley for a moment of unbridled narcissism. I wonder if he doesn’t recognize the similarity between us with our long, blond hair. He looks down at his work boots, as though he’s avoiding the view, and my hope sinks that he’s forgotten what happened. Why would God allow my house of cards to fall today? Besides God and my mother, Jake is the only person who knows what I did. All of it—the whole sordid tale. The butterflies quickly morph into something more like bats.

“Linds? You okay?” Haley puts my iced soy latte in front of me. “You’re as white as a sheet.”

I can’t bring myself to stop looking, but I close my eyes and capture it in my memory. I will remember this moment and be glad for it. What would my life have been like with him? I mouth my words of thankfulness.

“Do you know him?” Haley asks, looking toward the line where Jake is still waiting for his coffee.

I tear my gaze away and nod. “I think he’s someone I went to high school with. You know, back in the day.” I try to laugh.

“No way. He looks too old. Either that, or he can’t afford La Mer.”

“He’s hardly the type to smear moisturizing cream on his face. You’ve been out of the real world too long.”

“Simmer down; it was a joke. I’m only saying you don’t look like you could have gone to high school with him. It’s a compliment. Maybe he just looks like someone.” She slides into her chair, hanging her handbag over the back.

“He’s not wearing a wedding ring. My mother said he got married.”

“I thought you didn’t talk to your mother?”

“She mailed me that little tidbit. Another nail in my coffin, if you will.”

“What a peach your mother must be. Maybe he’s divorced. Or did you ever date him? Maybe he’s sworn off women for good now.” Haley giggles.

“Not funny.”

“Why don’t you go talk to him? Do you have a reunion coming up? I must say, he’s a hot ticket. Dark hair, brown eyes…you are single, you know?”

“They’re blue.” I inhale a long sip of my iced coffee. “Blue-green. His father had them, too.”

“You seem to know a lot about him for just being a classmate.” She leans in. “Are you holding out on me?”

“It’s not juicy. Not in a good way, anyway. Haley, I have a confession to make.” I move my seat over, so she’s blocking my view of Jake.

“This sounds serious.”

His cell phone trills, and I hear his deep voice answer. I close my eyes again and concentrate on his voice for a moment, before looking at Haley again.

“You’re killing me. What did you do already?”

“I did something terrible when I was younger.”

“Terrible, as in you killed someone and stuffed him in a closet? Or terrible as in you said you’d go to prom with someone and then dumped him? There was no pig’s blood involved, right?”

“It’s somewhere in the middle, and I think that Ron—”

Haley is looking at Jake when he suddenly heads toward us. “Shh! He’s coming over here!” Haley sits back in her chair, like she’s about to watch a romantic movie unfold. If only she knew that it was probably more of a horror flick in the making.

He sidles toward us, talking into his phone, and then he sees me. Our eyes meet, and once again, the past dissipates and I am not so very naïve, not so very worn down. I am me. Today’s me. I know what I want and I tell him so, and we laugh about all the mistakes, all the misunderstandings, and he’s over it. He understands me.

Or not.

He stops walking, and I look down at the work boots he wears, the length of his jeans spilling over the top of them. I lift my eyes back to his, and he offers a warm smile, that charming dimple on the left side appearing as he looks to Haley. My smile wavers. I stand up, and I meet his Ceylon sapphire gaze.

“Lindsay,” he says coolly as he nods his chin, steps around me, and saunters right out the door.

Haley watches him slam the door, and my confession hardly matters now, does it? “It wasn’t him, I guess.”

She giggles at me. “He just knew your name and gave you a dirty look?”

I shrug. “Weird, isn’t it?”

“We have got to get you back on the market before you go completely nuts.”

Lord have mercy. Lindsay Brindle on the market is more than L.A. needs.