downward. It looked as if the heavy metal was going right through the thick ice. But Cork knew there was a hole there Molly would use to plunge into after her sauna. She was simply clearing the thin layer of surface ice that had formed since she’d last taken a dip. When she and Cork did the sauna together, she usually consented to a brief roll in the snow or to just standing in the cold for a time while the icy air cooled them. She did this for Cork, who thought a plunge into the lake in the middle of winter was taking an experience a step too far. She put the ice spud away, took her skis and poles in hand, and started toward the house. When she saw Cork’s Bronco, a big smile spread across her pretty face.

“There is a God,” she said, sweeping into the kitchen, her cheeks flushed, her clothes carrying the cold that Cork could feel across the room. She pulled off her down jacket and hung it on a wall peg next to Cork’s coat. She wore a red sweater that she also pulled off, and under it a white thermal top that hugged her breasts and her flat belly. Her cheeks were deep pink and her eyes full of excitement. “I was out on that gorgeous lake thinking what a treat it would be to come back and sauna with you.” She crossed to him exuberantly and kissed him. She stepped back. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing.”

“That’s not true.” She studied him so carefully that Cork had to look away.

He cupped his coffee tightly with both hands. “We’ve got to talk.”

“You never talk. It must be bad.”

“Let’s sit down.”

“I’m okay.” She stared at him, and a cold, knowing look seemed to come into her eyes.

“Molly, I’ve been doing a lot a thinking. About us.”

“What about us?”

Cork looked at his coffee. He could see his eyes reflected on the dark surface. They looked worried.

“You’ve been wonderful, Molly. You’ve been better than I deserved.”

“Don’t feed me a lot of crap, Cork. What is it? What’s going on?”

“I want to try to put my marriage back together.”

“So that’s it.” She turned away and went to the stove. She took the tea kettle, filled it with water, set it on a burner, and turned on the gas flame. “She asked you back?”

“Not exactly.”

“This is your idea, then?”

He stepped nearer. “Molly, it’s not about you. You’ve been wonderful.”

“Right.”

“The truth is, it’s the children. I don’t want my kids to hurt anymore. Can you understand? I have a history in that house on Gooseberry Lane. Maybe it’s already too late, but I don’t want to let go if there’s a chance of saving it.”

She touched her forehead a moment, as if thinking deeply. “So you’ll be moving back in?”

“I already have in a way. I’m staying there now while my furnace gets fixed.”

She faced him, and all the freshness that had colored her face when she first came in was gone. “Next you’ll tell me you’re sleeping with her.”

“I want to put my life back together. For better or worse, Jo’s part of that.”

Molly’s eyes narrowed on him for a moment, then she pulled away and went to the cupboard. She grabbed a mug, and swung back toward him. “What do you expect from me? A blessing? Or maybe you think if things don’t work out, I’ll just throw the door open and you can waltz back in here. Well, you can’t, Cork.” She tugged at the lid of a canister that held tea. The lid flew off and hit the floor with a tinny clatter. She just stood for a moment, staring at the lid on the floor.

“I’m sorry, Molly.”

She shoved the canister back on the countertop. “To hell with the tea.” She reached up into the cupboard and took down a bottle of Jack Daniel’s.

“You don’t drink,” Cork told her.

“I do on special occasions.” She poured liquor into the mug and drank it down. “What are you waiting for? You’ve said what you had to.”

“I’m just wondering what you ever saw in me anyway. I’m a decade older than you, getting heavy, going bald. I smoke.”

“Whatever I thought I saw, I guess I was wrong. It doesn’t matter now anyway.”

The tea kettle began to whistle. Molly made no move to take it off the flame. Cork left. Outside he could still hear the cry of the tea kettle growing thinner and thinner as he walked away.

After Cork had gone, Molly went down to the sauna. In the changing room she took off her clothes and laid them neatly folded on the wooden bench. She stepped into the sauna itself, sat down in the darkened room, and let the heat draw out of her the anger and the hurt.

She’d almost told him she loved him. So many times, she’d been on the edge of letting the words spill out, but her past had kept her cautious. And now she was glad, very glad, she hadn’t. Let him go back to a woman who didn’t care. Molly didn’t care either. What ran down her cheeks and tasted of salt wasn’t tears but good cleansing sweat. It poured from every part of her body. When she finally stood and ran outside, she trailed steam like a thing that had been through fire. As she dropped into the hole she’d cleared of ice, the bitterly cold water of the lake squeezed her hard, wrung her out, and left her wonderfully empty.

20

After church, Jenny and Anne went with Cork to Sam’s Place. While he retrieved his dark suit, the girls spread out the corn for Romeo and Juliet.

“What’s that for?” Anne asked when they got back into the Bronco.

“It’s what I dress in to say nice things about a bad man.”

“Are you going with Mom to the memorial service for Judge Parrant?”

“I am.”

“You didn’t even like him,” Jenny pointed out.

“I like him better now,” Cork said.

Jenny smiled, then actually laughed.

At home, Cork put on his suit. While he was slipping on his tie, Anne knocked and came in. She sat on his bed and ran her hands over the bearskin. “Where’d this come from?”

“It belonged to Sam Winter Moon. He left it to me.”

“Is it a bearskin?”

“Bingo.” Cork leaned near the dresser mirror, took the two ends of his tie in hand and worked on a Windsor knot.

“Why’d he leave it to you?”

“He knew it would mean a lot to me.”

“What does it mean to you?”

Cork finished the knot. He sat beside Anne, took the bearskin, and laid it across both their laps. The skin was large and spilled onto the floor.

“It came from the biggest black bear I ever saw. Biggest Sam ever saw, too, and he’d seen plenty. We hunted it together when I was about your sister’s age.”

“You shot it?”

“Sam did.”

“Poor bear,” Anne said.

Cork nodded his agreement. “He was a magnificent animal.”

“Why’d Sam shoot him?”

“To save my life.”

“The bear was after you?” Anne looked up at him, eager for the story.

“In the beginning, we were after the bear.”

Вы читаете Iron Lake
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату