Beautiful Day (12 page)

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Authors: Elin Hilderbrand

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Fiction / Contemporary Women

BOOK: Beautiful Day
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He climbed into bed next to Pauline, the way he had for the past five years. He had
done something truly egregious, he realized, in marrying a woman he didn’t love.

“Pauline,” he said.

“I’m so sorry,” she said. “I shouldn’t have read the Notebook.”

The Notebook, right. Doug had forgotten about the Notebook.

“It’s okay,” he said.

“You forgive me?”

“I forgive you for reading the Notebook,” he said. “Your curiosity was only natural.
But Pauline…”

“And I can go to the wedding with you?” she said. “I mean, obviously, I knew you were
speaking in anger when you said you wanted to go alone. I knew you would never, ever
go without me.”

But he would. In his mind, when he pictured himself seven
hours from now in the car, he was alone, windows down, singing to the radio.

“Pauline,” he said. But he was stuck. He couldn’t get the words out. Every single
client he represented had endured a version of this conversation. Doug had heard about
hundreds of them in minute detail, he knew which words to say, but he couldn’t make
himself say them. Was it the courage he lacked, or the conviction?

Pauline laid her hand over his heart. She said, “You should get some sleep. We have
to get up early.”

THE NOTEBOOK, PAGE 17
Hors d’Oeuvres at the Reception

Nothing with spinach (stuck in teeth) and no smoked salmon (bad breath).

Trust me.

Everyone loves a raw bar. Call Spanky—he invented the raw bar on Nantucket—and he
is so in demand that he should be your first call once you say yes.

Your father loves anything wrapped in phyllo. He simply cannot resist a pillowy golden
triangle—biting into one, for him, is as good as Christmas. What is he going to get?

Anything but spinach!

MARGOT

O
utside the Chicken Box, there was a line a million people long. Margot felt herself
filling with despair. All the people in front of them were kids in their twenties,
and Margot’s feet were beginning to hurt in her four-inch heels, and she couldn’t
stop worrying that either Rhonda or Autumn was going to spill the beans about her
and Edge.

What had she been thinking?

Autumn said, “This line is pretty long.”

“I know,” Margot said. She wondered if they should cut bait and go home. It was after
eleven now, and they had a big weekend ahead of them. She had already lost Jenna and
Finn; she was only sailing with half a crew. Her dress was blotched with pink stains;
it looked like the dress had hives. And yet Margot still felt there was fun to be
had, if they stuck it out. They would go inside and dance, goddamn it.

She said, “Let’s go to the back door. I know someone.”

“I’m game,” Autumn said.

They stepped through the sand-and-gravel parking lot to the back of the bar, past
the Dumpster and a silver tower of empty kegs. Margot marched up the back steps in
her stilettos and knocked on the door.

She turned to Rhonda and Autumn. “I used to…”

The door swung open, and a dark-skinned man with wire-rimmed glasses stood looking
at them.

Margot said, “Pierre? It’s Margot. Margot Carmichael.”

Pierre smiled. “Margot.” He enveloped her in a bear hug. “I would recognize you anywhere.”

He would recognize her here, half drunk, trying to avoid the
line out front. This was the only place she’d seen him, approximately once each year,
since 1995, when they’d dated.

They had only gone out three times, then Margot had met Drum and dropped Pierre like
a hot potato. She had felt badly about it until she learned that Pierre had had a
girlfriend the whole time they were dating anyway.

He said, “You’re down for the weekend? Or all summer?”

“Just the weekend,” Margot said. “Some of us have to work.”

Pierre laughed. He said, “I work, girlfriend. Believe me, a full house every night
is hard work.” He ushered them into the back room and pulled three Coronas out of
a cooler. He said, “You ladies have fun!”

“Thanks!” Margot said. “My sister’s getting—”

But her words were drowned out by the sound of the band and the writhing mass of humanity
gyrating on the dance floor.

Autumn said, “Whoo-hoo, SCORE, girl, this is awesome!”

It was awesome, in a way. Margot had just capitalized on her long-ago quasi-romance
with the bar’s owner to get them inside. The band was playing “Champagne Supernova.”
Margot swilled from her cold beer.

“Let’s dance!” Autumn said.

Margot said, “I have to go to the ladies’. I’ll meet you up there.”

Autumn grabbed Rhonda by the hand, and the two of them threaded their way through
the crowd, toward the stage.

Margot wandered to the back of the bar, where there were three pool tables and the
crowd was thinner. The Chicken Box used to be the place she came to dance every night
of the summer. When she was only nineteen, she sneaked in using her cousin’s ID to
see Dave Matthews play. She had seen Squeeze, and Hootie and the Blowfish, and an
all-girl AC/DC tribute band called Hell’s Belles, and a funk band called Chucklehead
who
frequented the same coffee shop that she did back in New York. Margot couldn’t decide
if being at the Box made her feel younger or older.

She stepped into the ladies’ room. The girls waiting in line in front of her were
all in college, with long hair and bare midriffs and tight jeans. Even when Margot
was young, she hadn’t dressed that way. She’d worn hippie skirts and tank tops, or
surf dresses with bright, splashy flowers. Her hair had always been in a bun because
invariably she would show up here straight from a beach party where she would have
been thrown into the ocean by one of her drunk brothers or one of her drunk brothers’
drunk friends.

Yes, she felt a hundred years old. She mourned her youth and lost innocence. She thought,
I’m a divorced mother of three with a fifty-nine-year-old lover.

Imagine!

From her stall, Margot listened to a girl out by the sinks, talking on her phone.

“You’ve got to get here. The band is off the chain! Come right now…”

Margot pulled her phone out of her bag. How she hated the damn thing. But she was
feeling okay, she had survived the evening, or mostly. She would just check her texts,
and then, regardless of whether or not there was a text from Edge, she would go out
and dance.

She steeled herself. It didn’t really matter if there was a text from Edge; she would
see him tomorrow night. They were going to spend the weekend in the same place, although
not together. It would be stressful keeping their relationship hidden from Doug and
everyone else. In their last conversation, which had taken place on Monday night at
11 p.m., Edge had said, “I’m worried you won’t be able to handle it.”

This had infuriated Margot. Would she not be able to handle it because she felt more
for Edge than he did for her? Or because she wasn’t as emotionally mature as he was
at fifty-nine, after three marriages and three divorces?

She said, “I’ll be fine.”

And he had said, cryptically, “Well, let’s hope so.”

She checked her phone.

And there, glowing like a single golden nugget among smooth gray river rocks, was
his name.

Edge. Text message (2)

Not one message, but two! Margot’s heart suddenly had wings. She felt a surge of molten
energy like a silver river that could not be mistaken for anything else: it was love.
She had done the unthinkable and fallen in love with John Edgar Desvesnes III.

She wasn’t sure how she dropped the phone. One minute it was in her hands, and the
next minute it was gone. The strap of her purse slipped, and she had her beer wedged
between her elbow and her rib cage, and to keep her beer from falling, she had loosened
her grip on her phone and it dropped. She reached out to catch it, but she was too
late. It landed in the toilet with a splash.

Margot reached into the toilet to snatch it out. The phone had been submerged for
less than one second. Less than one second! She tried to dry the face of the phone
on the front of her stained silk dress, then she swabbed at it with a wad of bunched-up
toilet paper. She pushed the button repeatedly, like a person performing CPR. But
she knew it was no use. The phone was dead, cold, inert. The two text messages from
Edge were lost.

What had he said? Oh, what had he
said?

Margot shoved the lifeless phone in her purse. She exited the stall, washed her hands,
and examined herself in the mirror. She should have sensed a disaster like this; everything
about this
night had gone wrong, starting when Jenna had realized the Notebook was missing.

Now Margot understood Jenna’s hysterical reaction: a person’s words, a personal message
to you, lost forever. What could be more devastating?

Margot stepped out of the bathroom. She was going to find Rhonda and Autumn and tell
them she was going home. Her spirit had been sapped; she was all done. Some nights
had good karma, and some nights were cursed. Tonight was a fine example of the latter.

Margot fought her way through the crowd by the pool tables until she found her way
blocked by a man in a striped polo shirt.

“Excuse me,” she said.

But the man didn’t move.

Margot looked up.

The man said, “Hey, Margot.”

Margot swallowed. It was Griffin Wheatley, Homecoming King.

He laughed. “You should see your face,” he said. “Am I really that bad? It’s my eyes,
right? They still freak you out.”

“I never said they freaked me out,” Margot said. “Those were not my words.”

“You said they unsettled you.”

Unsettled.
He was right; that was what she’d said. Maybe because everyone had always commented
on the startling ice blue of Margot’s eyes, she was more deeply attuned to other people’s
eyes. Griff’s eyes had been hard to stop looking at once she noticed them. The intense
blue on the outside and green on the inside drew her in and made her feel like the
earth was spinning the wrong direction.

“I have to go,” Margot said. She sounded rude, even to herself.
“I’m sorry. I dropped my phone in the toilet, and I’m not sure what to do about it.”

“In the toilet?” Griff said. “Really?”

Margot nodded. She made a mental note not to tell anyone else she had dropped her
phone in the toilet. It was disgusting.

“Let me see it,” he said.

“No, there’s nothing you can do.”

“Please,” he said, holding out his hands. “Let me see it.”

Margot dug the phone out of her purse. It was nice that he’d offered to help. That
was one of the things her life was missing: someone to help. In her marriage to Drum
Sr., she had been the one who had taken care of everything. And Edge was too busy
putting out fires with his three ex-wives and four children; he didn’t have any spare
time or energy to problem-solve for Margot, and for this very reason, Margot didn’t
ask him.

Griff looked at the phone, shook it, pressed all the buttons in various combinations.
“It’s dead,” he said.

“I know,” Margot said. It physically hurt to hear someone else say it. “I drowned
it.”

“Well, can I buy you a drink?” Griff asked. “We can toast the passing of the phone.”

“No, thank you,” Margot said. “I’m leaving.”

“Oh, come on?” Griff said. “Just one drink? My buddies left, and the other women in
this bar are far too young for me.”

Great, Margot thought. He was offering to buy her a drink because she was old.

Homecoming King.
Just standing this close to him made her feel guilty. If he knew what she’d done
to him and why she’d done it, he would never have offered to buy her a drink. Or he
would have bought her a drink and thrown it in her face. That was what she deserved.

“I’m sorry, Griff,” Margot said, and she was sorry.
Sorrysorrysorry.
She took her phone back and crammed it into her purse. Even though it was useless,
she liked having it tucked safely away.

“Come on,” he said. “I don’t want you to feel awkward about the other stuff… signing
me off…”

Margot raised her palm. She couldn’t bear to stay another second.

“Not tonight,” Margot said.
Not any night.
She erupted in crazy-hysterical laughter. She was losing her mind. “I’m really sorry,
Griff. I have to go.”

“I’d ask for your number,” he said, “but something tells me you wouldn’t answer when
I called.”

She cackled some more, then clamped her mouth shut. She couldn’t encourage him.

“Just take my card,” he said. “And when you get a new phone, you can call me, how
about that? There’s no reason why we can’t be friends.”

Margot stared at his card: Griffin Wheatley, V.P. Marketing, Blankstar.
Friends?
No, she couldn’t take it, but he was handing it to her, and she couldn’t
not
take it. She slipped it into her purse.

“I’m serious,” Griff said. “Call me. In fact, why don’t you call me tonight when you
get home?”

“Tonight when I get
home?
” she said.

“From your land line,” he said. “I’ve heard homes on Nantucket are so quaint that
they still have such things.”

“My land line?” she said. “What for?”

He shrugged. “I don’t know. The one thing I miss about being married is having someone
to talk to late at night. Someone to tell all the stupid stuff.”

“Oh,” Margot said.

He said, “I’m sure I sound like an idiot.”

“No,” Margot said. “You don’t. You sound perfectly sane, actually.” She wanted to
say that she agreed with him—more times than she could count, she had lain alone in
bed, wishing that Edge was the kind of boyfriend she could call up to talk to about
the pointless minutiae of her day. But he wasn’t that kind of boyfriend; he wasn’t
a boyfriend at all. However, confessing this to Griff would just be another double
fault. She looked up at him. He was gazing at her with earnest blue-and-green Homecoming
King goodness—and all Margot could think was that the final injustice of her night
was that Griff was Griff and not someone else. Anybody else.

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