I stand up and catch my reflection in the mirror. Then I rub my palms on the legs of my jeans and sit gingerly on the edge of the bed. I wrap my arms close, hugging myself tight. Nicholas sits next to me and slides an arm around my waist. “What’s the matter?” he whispers. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

I shrug his hand away. “Don’t touch me,” I say. “You aren’t going to want to touch me.” I turn and sit cross- legged opposite him. Over his shoulder, I watch myself in the mirror. “Nicholas,” I say, seeing my own lips move over words I never wanted to hear. “I had an abortion.”

His back stiffens, and then his face sets, and finally he seems to be able to exhale. “You what?” he says. He moves closer, and the rage that darkens his features terrifies me. I wonder if he will grab me by the throat. “Is that where you were for three months? Getting rid of my child?”

I shake my head. “It happened before I met you,” I say. “It wasn’t your child.”

I watch expressions flicker across his face as he remembers. Finally, he shakes his head. “You were a virgin,” he says. “That’s what you told me.”

“I never told you anything,” I say quietly. “That’s what you wanted to believe.” I hold my breath and tell myself that maybe it won’t make a difference; after all, Nicholas had been living with his other girlfriend before he decided to marry me, and these days very few women come to marriage untouched. But then again, not all women are Nicholas’s wife.

“You’re Catholic,” he says, trying to fit the pieces together. I nod. “That’s why you left Chicago,” he says.

“And that’s why,” I add softly, “I left Max. The day that I went-the day he fell off the couch and got that nosebleed-I figured I had to be the worst mother around. I had killed my first child; I had hurt my second. I figured no mother was better than someone like me.”

Nicholas stands up, and I see in his eyes something I’ve never seen before. “You may be right about that,” he says, speaking so loud I think the baby will wake. He grabs me by the shoulders and shakes me violently, so hard that my neck wrenches and I cannot see straight. “Get out of my house,” he says, “and do not come back. What else do you want to get off

He sinks onto the edge of the bed as if his weight has suddenly become too much for him to bear. He bends down and holds his face in his hands. I want to touch him, to take away the ache. Looking at him, I wish I had never spoken. I reach out my hand, but Nicholas flinches before my skin brushes his. Ego te absolvo. “Forgive me,” I say.

He takes the words like a brutal blow. When he lifts his head, his eyes are red-rimmed and brimming with fury. He stares at me, seeing me for what I really am. “God damn you,” he says.

chapter 36

Nicholas

When Nicholas was a sophomore undergraduate at Harvard, he and his roommate, Oakie Peterborough, had got drunk and sprayed the fire extinguisher’s foam all over their sleeping resident dorm adviser. They were put on probation for a year and then had gone their separate ways. When Nicholas entered Harvard Med, Oakie entered Harvard Law, and years before Nicholas had ever done surgery, Oakie was already an associate at a Boston law firm.

Nicholas takes a sip of his lemon water and tries to find the slightest resemblance between the Oakie he knew and the matrimonial attorney who sits across from him at the restaurant table. He was the one to call and ask about a lunch date, and Oakie, over the phone, said, “Hell, yeah,” and penciled him in that afternoon. Nicholas thinks about Harvard and its connections. He watches the cool confidence of his old roommate as he settles his napkin on his lap, the shifting indifference of his eyes. “It’s great to see you, Nicholas,” Oakie says. “Amazing, isn’t it, how you work in the same town and still never get the chance to see your old friends.”

Nicholas smiles and nods. He does not consider Oakie Peterborough an old friend; he hasn’t since he was nineteen and found him with a hand down Nicholas’s own girlfriend’s pants. “I’m hoping you can give me some answers,” Nicholas says. “You practice family law, don’t you?”

Oakie sighs and leans back. “Family law-what a crock. What I do doesn’t keep families together. Sort of a contradiction in terms.” He stares at Nicholas, and his eyes widen in realization. “You don’t mean for yourself,” he says.

Nicholas nods, and a muscle jumps at his jaw. “I want to find out about getting a divorce.” Nicholas has lost a lot of sleep over this and has come to a decision with blinding clarity. He doesn’t give a damn what it costs him, as long as he gets Paige out of his life and gets to keep Max. He is angry at himself for letting down his guard when Paige came into the bedroom last night. Her touch, the lilac smell of her skin-for a moment he was lost in the past, pretending she’d never left. He almost forgave the past three months. And then she told him the one thing he would never forget.

He starts shaking when he thinks of another man’s hands on her body, another man’s child in her womb, but he believes that witnec D‡h time the shock will pass. It’s not really the abortion that upsets him. As a doctor, Nicholas spends so much time and effort saving lives that he can’t personally support the decision to have an abortion, although he understands the motives of the pro-choice camp. No, what unnerves him is the secrecy. Even if he could listen to Paige’s reasons for terminating a pregnancy, he couldn’t understand hiding something like that from one’s own husband. He had a right to know. It might have been her body, but it was their shared past. And in eight years, she never thought enough of him to mention the truth.

Nicholas spent the early morning trying to push from his mind the image of Paige begging for mercy. She had been shadowed by the mirror, so that there were two of her, her words and actions mocking her like a clown’s silhouette. She had looked so fragile that Nicholas couldn’t help but think of the wispy heads of dried dandelions, vulnerable to a breath. One word from him, and he knew she would fall apart.

But Nicholas had enough anger pulsing through his blood to block out any residual feelings. He was going to beat her at her own game, taking Max before she could use the poor kid to absolve her of guilt. He was going to get a divorce and drive her as far from him as possible, and maybe in five, in ten years, he wouldn’t see her face every time he looked at his son.

Oakie Peterborough blots his meaty lips with his napkin and takes a deep breath. “Look,” he says, “I’m a lawyer, but I’m also your friend. You ought to know what you’re getting into.”

Nicholas stares him down. “Just tell me what I have to do.”

Oakie exhales, a sick sound like that of an overboiled kettle. “Well, Massachusetts is a state that permits fault in divorce cases. That means you don’t have to prove fault to get a divorce, but if you can, the property and assets will be divided accordingly.”

“She abandoned me,” Nicholas interrupts. “And she lied for eight years.”

Oakie rubs his hands together. “Was she gone for more than two years?” Nicholas shakes his head. “She wasn’t the primary breadwinner, was she?” Nicholas snorts and throws his napkin on the table. Oakie purses his lips. “Well, then it’s not desertion-at least not legally. And lying… I’m not sure about lying. Usually, just cause for fault is things like excessive drinking, beating, adultery.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised,” Nicholas mutters.

Oakie does not hear him. “Fault would not include a change of religion, say, or moving out of the house.”

“She didn’t move,” Nicholas clarifies. “She left.” He stares up at Oakie. “How long is this going to take?”

“I can’t know yet,” he says. “It depends on whether we can find grounds. If not, you get a separation agreement, and a year later it can be finalized into a divorce.”

“A year,” Nicholas yells. “I can’t wait a year, Oakie. She’s going to do something crazy. She justtatN€† up and left three months ago, remember-she’s going to take my kid and run.”

“A kid,” Oakie says softly. “You didn’t say there was a kid.”

When Nicholas leaves the restaurant, he is seething. What he has learned is that although courts no longer

Вы читаете Harvesting the Heart
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