Saturday, March 22, 2014

When It Rains (Part 3)

The cafe down the street is called Lox and Love and it's part of the reason we loved this apartment so much when we were looking for a place. David's Jewish and he said that only this place had any decent lox in the whole city but really I just liked the quirky décor and the odd people that came here. Of course I haven't been since he left. It's only been two months but I might as well have never been here. The tables are different and everything seems way more modern. It's funny how things change so quickly—all you have to do is look away for an instant and it's a different world.

The puddles on the street are still giving off that kind of happy aroma and I'm almost smiling while I walk. Almost, even though I'm screaming and crying and gnashing my teach on the inside. Almost, even though I know that what's about to happen could overcome the happiest thunderstorm ever. I have to focus on the anger to keep it pure so I don't even begin to think of forgiveness.

But there he is, sitting at our old table in the corner. He's wearing a beard and I've never seen him with one. When we were living together I always marveled that I'd never seen a man who was so fastidious about shaving. There was never a stray stubble before but now he's sitting there and he looks like Grizzly Adams. He's a mountain man with bags under his eyes and shaggy hair. Just look away and maybe he'll change back.

I stop of course before I walk over to him and go to the counter, each step up the funny little ramp they have hitting with a loud report, I'm putting so much force into them. Everyone looks up but him. The few people who are in the shop today have smiles on their faces left over from the rain and my anger seems to quell that a little, even as silent as I am. David though, is just staring down into his coffee.

He looks up though when I walk over and I see that his hand is shaking a little as he holds his half empty cup of black coffee. Black coffee. He used to always fill it full of so much soy milk it looked like a vanilla latte but now, it's black.

“You're looking good.” The words kind of croak out of him like he's been silent for a long time but I know that we just spoke on the phone.

“You're not.”

“I know. Listen, I--”

“No!” I slam my cup down on the table hard enough that in a different state of mind I might be shocked it didn't shatter. Instead I stare at him with fire in my eyes and I sit down, willing him to silence with my mind. “You listen.”

My voice is low but I know he can hear every word; his eye twitches that way that it always did when we were having one of our rare, really viscous arguments. “I woke up alone on a Tuesday morning with a cold bed and two cats scratching at my face to be fed. I called you and called you and went to your work and looked for you and called every goddamn person we knew and screamed and cried and punched holes in the walls and had to take fucking Milo to the vet because he ate a bunch of hair ties and when they asked where you were 'cause they remembered you from before I had to say I didn't know and then I burst out crying and my mom told me to go see a therapist and they put me on meds and then I tried to fucking overdose and had to get my stomach pumped and,” I take a deep breath and start to go on but the fire has died inside me and suddenly I don't have anything to say.

“How are Bootsy and Milo? Is he okay?”

“They're fine, but no thanks to you. The surgery cost $2500 that I didn't have. I had to get a credit card. They have these special ones just for pet emergencies and. . .”

Suddenly I'm tired and I just wish this was over. He looks so sad and it's even worse than it would've been if he were angry. I can see in his eyes that this is as hard for him as it is for me. He's also silent and suddenly I remember that he called me here, not the other way around.

“What do you have to say to me?”

“It's a long story.”

“No, it's not. Now tell it.”

“That morning--”

“It was a Tuesday. The twenty fifth of March. I woke up at 9:27. That morning?”

“Yes. I left early for work because I was trying to beat the rain. They were calling for a lethargic shower and I didn't want to get caught in it. I was still trying to impress them at the firm and I thought if I showed up and got a lot of work done when everyone else was listless then they would--”

“Shut up!” Suddenly the fire is back, for an instant, and I notice that clouds are turning dark again outside. “Just tell me what happened.”

“I was hurrying down the street; hell, I was practically running because the sky looked so terrible and you know what the rain does to me. I've always been sensitive to it.”

“Then why the fuck did you want us to move up here where it rains every fucking two days?”

“Please?” He's begging me with his eyes and no matter how much I want to stop it I feel bad for him. “Thanks. I was running and when I was going past the front of the Starbucks a girl came out with a coffee and I ran right into her. We both fell on the ground, our arms and legs all tangled up like something out of a movie. When I looked up and started babbling apologies she screamed and I realized it was Monica.”

“Monica?” I don't know a Monica and I've never known a Monica. What the hell is he talking about?

“I never told you about Monica. It's a long story.”

“I've got time.”

“Monica and I were. . . We were engaged. We lived together for a while. I never told you but she was part of why I wanted to move far away. I hadn't seen her in years but she looked exactly the same and then well, it started to rain. Hard.”

The tears are running down my cheeks and if I were paying attention I'd be able to see the faces looking over at me and the rain pattering on the windows outside.

“It wasn't a lethargic rain that day. You know how the news people always get it wrong. It was a nostalgic, hopeful rain. Do you remember? It probably passed by the time you woke up but for a while there it just poured and poured and well, you know how it is here.”

“You both got caught in it?”

“We were soaked. I don't remember it all but then we were in her car. She was here for a conference. She had no idea I'd moved here. We went back to her hotel and . . . We caught up. There was another rain later that day. Do you remember?”

“Yes, I do. I'll never forget that day, even if you do.”

“I know. The weather was bad that week. It came and went so fast and it was so hard in little down pours. First it was nostalgia and then hope and then that strange sense of adventure that sometimes comes and then--”

“You fucked.”

He looks at me and he's crying too. I know what I said is true and all he can do is look at me with those sad eyes that have so many more wrinkles than they did just a few months ago.

“Where have you been since then? Your job, our cats, everything. I thought you were dead.”

“She. . . We both just kind of took off. She was leaving that night and I just left. All this seemed so mundane and I just kept thinking about--”

“Stop it.” The rain is coming down harder outside and I'm so wrapped up in my own emotions I'm impervious to it, whatever it may be. “I'm going to leave now and I don't ever want to see you again.”

“But, my things, Bootsy and Milo. Listen, I'm sorry, that's why I came here, to say I'm sorry.”

“No. It's not that easy.” And it's not. Everything makes sense now and it's all over. “You ran off with her and then she dumped you again, right? And now you've come back and you're going to tell me it was all the goddamn weather's fault and you're not to blame. You're going to say you couldn't help it and you'll try your damnedest to beg me back.”

I look him in the eyes and I can see it all acting out between us. I can see all the different ways it might go and I know I have to leave now. “Well, no. I'm leaving now and if you want any of your stuff I'll tell you were you can find it. I put it all in a storage unit on the south side of town a month ago.” I grab in my purse for a pen and while he's still looking at me in shock I jot down the address on a napkin. “I'll call them and tell them it's yours. The cats are mine.”

And then I'm walking out of the cafe and I'm not looking back. The rain is falling, of course, and it hits me in heavy drops that cascade off my hair and my shoulders. I know by the time I make it home I'll be soaked but I don't care.

Thank god the rain, for the first time since we moved here, since I moved here, doesn't bring anything with it but water and it feels so nice to be washed clean.

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