simply what to do with the note itself. Do I write a response on the blank lines underneath his instruction? Leave it on the counter in a crumpled ball? Toss it into the garbage? Press it into my journal as a sad memento of a sad time? None of the choices seem quite right-so I simply place it back on the pad, carefully aligning the edges to create the appearance that it was never disturbed, never read. I look at it one more time, feeling a sharp pang of remorse and regret that we have become the kind of couple who not only fights in the middle of the night but leaves ultimatums on Post-it notes in the kitchen.
We might even become the Buckhead couple that people talk about over a cocktail at the club.
I can just hear the Ginnys of the world:
I stand at the counter for a long time, flashing back to the distant past and then the recent past, and a few snapshots in between, wondering if I believe Andy's words. I decide that I do. He might change his mind, but for right now, he means it.
And yet, instead of striking fear in my heart, or giving me pause of any kind, I feel all the more calm, resolute, indignant, as I head back upstairs and get back under the covers. How dare he draw a line in the sand? How dare he not even try to understand what I'm feeling? How dare he back me into a corner with his demands? I try to turn the tables, imagining Andy, homesick, wishing to reconnect with something or someone. And then I realize that that is why I moved to Atlanta. With him. For him. That is why I'm here now.
I fall asleep, dreaming random, banal vignettes about getting the easy chair in our bedroom slip-covered, and spilling sweet tea on my keyboard, and assembling a last-minute, makeshift gypsy costume for a neighborhood Halloween party. Dreams that, even under heavy scrutiny, make no sense at all given that I am at a crossroads, in a crisis.
When I wake up for good, it is four-fifty-nine, one minute before my alarm is set to go off. I arise, shower, dress, and go through all the matter-of-fact motions of a normal travel day. I gather my camera equipment, reorganize my suitcase, print my boarding pass, even check the weather in New York. Mid-sixties and scattered showers. Oddly enough, I can't conjure what mid-sixties feels like, perhaps because I've been hot for so long, so I focus on the rain, packing my umbrella and a black trench coat.
All the while, I think of Andy's note, telling myself I can always back out at the last minute. When the sun rises, I can decide to stay. I can ride the MARTA train to the airport, weave my way through security, meander the whole way to my gate, and still come home.
But deep down, I know that's not going to happen. I know that I will be long gone when Andy returns home to find his note, undisturbed on our marble counter.
Five blurry hours later, I find myself in the cab line at LaGuardia, the sounds, smells, sights all so achingly familiar.
'Where are you headed?' a young girl behind me asks, interrupting my solitude. With ripped jeans, a ponytail, and an oversized backpack, she looks like a student. I imagine that she is near broke, and hoping to split cab fare into the city.
I clear my throat, realizing that I have not yet spoken today. 'Queens,' I say, hoping she's Manhattan bound. I am not in the mood for conversation, but don't have the heart to turn her down.
'Oh, drats,' she says. 'I was hoping we could share a cab… I was going to take the bus, but I'm kinda in a hurry.'
'Where are you going?' I ask, not because I really want to know, but because I can tell she's dying for me to ask. I bet a boy's involved. A boy is
Sure enough, she says, 'To see my boyfriend. He lives in Tribeca.'
She says
'Hmm,' I murmur. 'Great area.'
'Yuh,' she says, as I detect a Minnesotan or Canadian accent. 'He just found this
I smile, nod. 'And where do
She pulls a wrinkled jean jacket out of her roller bag, as I think denim on denim-
It is a glorious non sequitur once again proving her love, proving that everything comes back to him.
The line snakes forward, bringing me inches closer to Leo.
'So… are you coming home?' she asks.
I give her a puzzled look until she clarifies, 'Do you live in Queens?'
'Oh… no,' I say. 'I'm meeting someone there… for work.'
'You're a photographer?' she asks.
For a second, I am amazed by her intuition, but then remember my bags, my equipment.
'I am,' I say, feeling more and more like myself by the minute.
She smiles and says, 'That's cool.'
Suddenly reaching the front of the line, I tell my new, nameless friend good-bye.
'Good-bye,' she says, so happily. She waves-which is an odd gesture when you're standing so close to someone.
'Good luck,' I tell her.
She says thanks, but gives me an inquisitive look, likely wondering what luck has to do with anything. I want to tell her
'Where to?' he asks as we both climb in the car.
I give him the long ago memorized address, nervously checking my makeup in my compact mirror. I am wearing only mascara and lip gloss, and resist the temptation to add more, just as I made myself stick with a ponytail and a simple outfit of jeans, a white button-down shirt rolled at the sleeves, and black flats. This trip might be about more than work, but at least I have
I nervously pull my phone out of my bag just as Leo texts me:
My heart pounds as I envision him freshly showered, checking his watch, waiting for me.
I send back:
An instant later, he texts a lone smiley face, which puts me at ease, but also surprises me. Leo has never been an emoticon type of guy, unless you count his occasional colon-dash-slash face:-/ that he sometimes tacked onto the end of his e-mails, mocking my slightly asymmetrical lips-something Andy has never noticed, or, at least, has never pointed out.
I smile back at my phone, in spite of my mood-which isn't bad, but is by no means smiley. Then I slip my earphones on, turn on my iPod, and listen to Ryan Adams singing 'La Cienega Just Smiled,' one of my favorite songs that can make me feel either