“Lots of things to do.”
“On Sunday?”
“Sunday, Monday, it doesn’t matter.” She put her hand on the doorknob. “I made juice- there’s a pitcher in the fridge.”
I walked over to her, put my hand on her wrist.
“Stay just a little longer.”
She eased away. “I really have to go.”
“Come on, take a breather.”
“I don’t need a breather, Alex.”
“At least stay for a while and let’s talk.”
“About what?”
“Us.”
“There’s nothing to talk about.”
Her apathy was forced, but it pushed my button anyway. Months of frustration were compressed into a few moments of blazing soliloquy:
She was selfish. Self-obsessed. How did she think it felt to live with a hermit? What had I done to deserve this kind of treatment?
Then a laundry list of my virtues, of every lofty service I’d performed for her since the day we’d met.
When I was through she put down her bag and took a seat on the couch. “You’re right. We do need to talk.”
She stared out the window.
I said, “I’m listening.”
“I’m trying to collect my thoughts. Words are your business, Alex. I can’t compete with you on that level.”
“No one needs to compete with anyone. Just talk to me. Tell me what’s on your mind.”
She shook her head. “I don’t know how to put this without being hurtful.”
“Don’t worry about that. Just let it out.”
“Whatever you say, doctor.” Then: “Sorry, this is just very hard.”
I waited.
She clenched her hands, unflexed them and spread them out. “Look around this room- the furniture, the artwork- everything exactly the way it was the first time I saw it. Picture-perfect-
“How can you say that? This is your home.”
She started to reply, shook her head and turned away.
I stepped into her line of vision, pointed to the ash-burl trestle table in the dining room. “The only furniture that means anything to me is
Silence.
“Say the word and I’ll chop everything to matchsticks, Robin. We’ll start from scratch. Together.”
She put her face in her hands, sat that way for a while, and finally looked up, wet-eyed. “This isn’t about interior decorating, Alex.”
“What
“
“I never thought that kind of thing mattered to you.”
“I never hinted that it did- it’s me, too, Alex. Accepting, going along, fitting into your preconceived notions. Meanwhile, I’ve been living a lie- viewing myself as strong, self-sufficient.”
“You
She laughed without joy. “That was Daddy’s line: You are
“Did the Tokyo deal have anything to do with this?”
“The Tokyo deal made me stop and think about what I wanted out of life, made me realize how far I was from it- how beholden I’ve always been to someone.”
“Babe, I never meant to hem you in-”
“That’s the
“I don’t view you as a patient,” I said, “I love you, for God’s sake.”
“Love,” she said. “Whatever the hell that means.”
“I know what it means to me.”
“Then you’re just a better person than I am, okay? Which is the crux of the problem, isn’t it! Doctor Perfect. Ph.D. problem-solver. Looks, brains, charm, money, all those patients who think you’re God.”
She got up, walked the floor. “Dammit, Alex, when I first met you, you had problems- the burnout, all those self-doubts. You were a
“You were, and I
She smiled. “No. Now you’re fixed, my darling. Perfectly tuned. And there’s nothing left for me to do.”
“That’s crazy. I’ve been miserable not seeing you.”
“Temporary reaction,” she said. “You’ll cope.”
“You must think I’m pretty shallow.”
She walked some more, shook her head. “God, I’m listening to myself and realizing it all comes down to jealousy, doesn’t it? Stupid, childish jealousy. The same way I used to feel about the popular girls. But I can’t help it- you’ve got it all together. Everything organized into a neat little routine: run your three miles, take a shower, work a little, cash your checks, play your guitar, read your journals. Fuck me until we both come, then fall asleep, grinning. You buy tickets to Hawaii, we take a vacation. Show up with a picnic basket, we take lunch. It’s an assembly line, Alex, with you pushing the buttons, and one thing Tokyo taught me was that I don’t want an assembly line. The crazy thing is, it’s a great life. If I let you, you’d take care of me forever, make my life one perfect, sugar-coated dream. I know lots of women would kill for something like that, but it’s not what
Our eyes met. I felt stung, turned away.
“Oh, God,” she said, “I’m hurting you. I just hate this.”
“I’m fine. Just go on.”
“That’s all of it, Alex. You’re a wonderful man, but living with you has started to
She moved toward the door. “I have to go now. Please.”
“Take all the time you need,” I said. “All the space. Just don’t cut me off.”
She stood trembling in the doorway. Ran to me, kissed my forehead, and was gone.
Two days later I came home and found a note on the ash-burl table: