Read Best Friends Forever Online
Authors: Jennifer Weiner
Tags: #Female Friendship, #Contemporary Women, #Humorous, #General, #Fiction, #Literary, #Illinois, #Humorous Fiction
Jordan made al the right noises, offered al the right praise and words of encouragement, saying “nice work” and
“good job” and “I’l check in tomorrow morning,” and cut Hol y off before her voice could soften as she asked how he was doing. And then, as the hands of the clock slipped past midnight, he did the thing he’d resisted doing for the more than twenty-four hours since he’d heard the news: he dialed Patti’s
number,
her
cel
phone
number,
which
was stil the same as it had been in the days when they’d lived together.
She answered on the third ring. “Jordan?”
Hang up, he told himself. Hang up right
now. Instead, he asked, “Remember when we used to play Scrabble?”
From two thousand miles away, he heard his ex-wife sigh. “Oh, Jordan.”
“Remember? In the hospital that last time? You spel ed ‘ fromage,’ and I chal enged you because it was a foreign word, and then they came to give you that shot…”
“Epidural,” said Patti. She sounded unhappy. He’d made her unhappy. As usual.
“I was right, you know,” he said. “You can’t use French.” He squeezed his eyes shut. His face was wet. Sweat, he figured, or maybe he’d spil ed some voodoo. “Guess where I am.”
“Wherever you are, I hope someone else has your car keys,” said Patti.
“Key West,” he said, pronouncing each word careful y. “I am in Key West conducting an investigation.” Shit. He’d been doing al right until “investigation,” but that hadn’t come out so wel .
“Jordan,” said Patti. “Are you seeing someone?”
“A woman?” he asked stupidly. “No, Patti. I don’t want that.” Only you, he thought. Only my wife.
“Not a woman, a therapist,” said Patti.
“Oh. Yes,” he lied.
“No, you’re not,” Patti said. Before he could try to insist that he was, she continued. “Do you know what I think you should do? Get yourself some Tylenol, and a big bottle of water, and take the Tylenol, and drink the water, and go to sleep.”
“I can’t,” he said querulously. “I’m investigating, remember?”
“Your investigation can wait until morning,”
she said.
“Maybe I’l move down here,” he said, and gulped a mouthful of his drink. “It’s very warm.”
He set his bucket down and wiped his face with the washcloth he’d brought from the bathroom. “There’s palm trees. Jimmy Buffett’s got a restaurant.”
“That sounds nice,” she said. She was humoring him. It was the same tone he imagined she used with her remedial reading
students. That’s excel ent work!
Good job sounding that out!
“Come here,” he said. “There’s an airport. You fly to Miami, then connect. Or I’l drive back up and meet you. Just bring a bathing suit. I can buy you whatever you need.”
“Oh, Jordan,” she said. She made a noise into the telephone, and he thought he’d made her cry.
“I miss you,” he said, and that was true, but it wasn’t the biggest part of the truth, which was that he missed being a husband, having a home to come back to at the end of the day, having a wife across the table, next to him on an airplane or in a car; a wife who knew his whole history: how he’d gotten stung by a jel yfish in the Bahamas and tried to pee on himself to make the stinging stop, how he hated beets and little airplanes and the smel of gasoline; a wife who would sing
“I Loves You Porgy” in the original political y incorrect dialect when she was drunk.
“Water,” said Patti, from her warm bed in Chicago. Undoubtedly, Rob Fine, DDS, was at her side, maybe curled up and snoring, or maybe glaring at her, squinting and pissed, knowing it was only a handful of hours before the alarm clock rang, sending them out of their beds.
“Tylenol.”
“I heard you had a baby.” For a moment, there was silence, and he thought that she wasn’t going to answer, or that maybe she’d hung up.
Patti’s voice, when she final y started talking,
was
proud
and
shy
and
embarrassed. “Rob and I adopted a little girl from Guatemala. We brought her home three weeks ago. Her name’s Lily, for my grandmother.”
Lily. Lily had been their girl’s name. He rubbed his palm over his wet cheek, thinking he wouldn’t be able to force his voice around the lump in his throat. “I’m sorry about ‘fromage, ’
he said. “I should have let you have the points.” But he was talking to a dial tone, which eventual y became an unpleasant beeping, which turned into a mechanical voice. If you’d like to make a
cal , please hang up and try again. If you
need help, press zero for an operator.
I need help, Jordan thought. He gulped from his bucket, then lay on the bed and closed his eyes and pictured Patti, Patti in heels and a tight black skirt he’d liked, walking briskly down a hal way, towing a wheeled suitcase behind her, maybe holding a little girl’s hand; Patti steering a rental car through the streets that led toward the ocean, driving along with a cup of coffee in the cup holder, trying to find him.
After forty-five minutes of lying there, he decided that if he couldn’t sleep, he might as wel work. He picked up his car keys and his Voodoo Bucket, and went out to continue the hunt.
FORTY-SIX
“Dan?” It was morning, Monday morning,
and Chip Mason was shaking his shoulder.
Dan groaned, squinting in the light. Merry
had dropped him off at Chip’s on Sunday
morning. He’d hurried to the door, almost
running, desperate for Chip to answer and
shoving his mouth close to his friend’s ear
when he did. “Don’t you go al Holy Joe on
me,” he’d hissed. “This woman is batshit
insane, and you’ve got to let me in.” Startled,
Chip had looked past him, at Merry’s
minivan, then opened the door.
“You got any beer?” Dan had asked,
making his way to the kitchen and hoping
that Chip wouldn’t ask what had happened
and how he’d come to be driving around in
Holy Merry Armbruster’s minivan.
“It’s nine in the morning,” Chip had said.
“Don’t be an old woman.” Dan opened the
refrigerator, where of course there was no
beer. There was milk, and apple juice (apple
juice? What kind of grown man drank that?
), but nothing stronger than Sprite.
“What happened?” Chip asked as Dan
lifted the green plastic bottle to his mouth
and commenced chugging. And there must
have been something in his voice, a familiar
tone somewhere between skepticism and
indulgence—oh, Danny, what did you do now?— that reminded Dan, bruisingly, of his mother. That was what it had been, he
realized, feeling stunned and sick, back at
Merry’s…the way she’d looked at him, not in
anger but in disappointment. In sorrow. His
mother had been the one who would pick
him up when he’d get suspended, the one
who’d drive him home when he got benched
from the footbal games, and each time
she’d ask him that question, then sigh and
say, You’l be the death of me. He put the soda down on the table. When he and his friends had gotten in trouble for
painting shit on Addie Downs’s driveway
(Downs Syndrome, they’d cal ed her, a name
he’d thought of himself that never failed to
crack him up), he’d given his mother the
bare minimum of information. They’d painted
some graffiti, just a prank, no big deal, the
freakin’ vice principal had it in for him, he’d
said. He’d reminded her that Addie had
been the one to accuse him—falsely, he
took pains to point out—of messing with
Valerie Adler. He didn’t say that Addie had it
coming, but he let the implication hang in
the air and linger. Only that time, his mother
hadn’t sighed, hadn’t indulged him. She’d sat
him down at the kitchen table—he was a
foot tal er than she was by that point, a
hundred pounds heavier, but she could stil
scare him—and had looked at him steadily
before dropping her eyes and starting to cry.
“What?” he’d asked. “What, Ma?”
She’d wiped her face and looked at him,
eyes blazing, looking…It took him a minute
to sort out, and when he did, he had felt that
same sick, stunned feeling that came over
him in Chip’s kitchen. His mother had looked
ashamed. Do you know what it’s like, she
asked him, to raise a son who’s no good? Do you have any idea how it feels?
He’d started to protest, to launch into his
litany of excuses—no big deal, it was just
paint, it would wash right off—only, midway
through his recitation, she’d gotten to her
feet and turned her back on him. I’m done with you, she’d said. I’m done trying. And even though she’d cooked his meals and
washed his clothes, had dropped him off for
the first day of col ege and made
Thanksgivings and Christmases for years,
what she’d said that day was true. In some
way that was undefinable but undeniable,
apparent mostly in the absences and
omissions, in the things she didn’t ask him
about (girlfriends, future plans), she’d given
up on her only son. He had disappointed
her. He had broken her heart.
Slowly, he sank down in a chair at Chip’s
kitchen table. “What happened?” his old
friend asked again. Dan shook his head.
Then he’d lowered it into his hands and sat
there with his eyes shut until Chip told him
that services were starting soon, and Dan
surprised both of them by saying, “I’l come.”
That had been his first time inside a
church since he’d left his parents’ house.
When Chip, looking al official up in front of
the altar, had said “Let us pray,” Dan had
dropped his head so fast he heard his neck
crack. He’d spent the afternoon on his
knees again, stil not talking, not answering
when Chip asked what was on his mind or if
he wanted to talk about it. Instead of
thinking, he washed Chip’s floors with a
brush and bucket he’d found underneath
the sink, then worked over the bathroom
grout with an old toothbrush. Even with al of
the cleaning, even with the praying and the
fasting (which was mostly inadvertent, since
it turned out he was so hungover he couldn’t
actual y keep solid food down), he couldn’t
get Valerie Adler out of his mind, Valerie’s
face in the country club parking lot, twisting
as she told him he’d ruined her life, and a
younger Valerie, her face blurred with tears,
her hands pushing at his shoulders, saying, Please. Saying No. Valerie’s pleas getting mixed up with his mother’s voice, quietly
asking if he knew what it was like to raise a
son that was no good.
Chip had made them dinner—spaghetti
with jarred sauce, a salad from a bag. Dan
couldn’t eat. “What’s wrong?” his friend
asked for the third time…and that time he’d
told.
“She said she’d tel her father,” he’d
groaned to Chip by the end of it. “And you
know what I said? I said, ‘You don’t even
have a father.” He’d squeezed his eyes shut,
hating the stupid teenager he’d been, drunk
on cheap beer, taking what he wanted,
breaking his mother’s heart. Chip had
listened while Dan told the story, bringing it
up like a hunk of rotten meat, talking until
his throat was hoarse and Chip spread a
sheet on the couch and told him to get some
rest.
Now it was morning. Dan got up from the
couch, stil dressed in the clothes Merry had
given him, the too-short pants, the shirt that
smel ed like someone had died inside of it,
probably while smoking an entire carton of
unfiltered cigarettes. He jammed his feet
into the tight rubber boots and looked at the
doorway, where Chip was waiting.
“Can you take me somewhere?”
He waited for Chip’s nod, then went to the
kitchen, where he found a glass and drank
two glasses of warm, mineral-tasting tap
water. It occurred to him that this might very
wel be the last thing he’d drink, the last
thing he’d taste as a free man, and the
thought made him gag and sent him reeling
over to the kitchen table. He col apsed into
a chair. Chip watched him for a moment,
then crossed the kitchen and gave Dan’s
shoulders a squeeze. Dan got to his feet.
“Where are we going?” Chip asked.
“I’l tel you,” said Dan. He got to his feet,
bracing himself, getting ready for what he
knew was coming. “Get in the car and I’l tel
you.”
Chip nodded, picked up his keys, and led
Dan out the door.
FORTY-SEVEN
Don’t drive, Patti had said. But Jordan didn’t have to listen to Patti anymore. “Bad gums,”
she’d said, and he’d believed her. Dentistfucking Patti and her new little girl. Jordan unlocked the rental car’s doors, got behind the wheel, and started driving, up one street and down the other. Key West wasn’t that big. He bet he could hit every house in the place by sunrise.
He made his way to a neighborhood cal ed the East End, a series of narrow streets, each one lined with trim wooden cottages set on postage-stamp lawns. He drove slowly, seeing whose lights were on, looking at the license plates of the cars in the driveways. After an hour or so of this, he slowed and then stopped in front of an ancient green station wagon with Il inois plates that he’d last seen speeding away from Crescent Drive.
He sat back behind the wheel and stared past the car at the dark windows of the little white cottage, snug behind a yard ful of red-and-pink blossoms and the spiky leaves of palm trees. Gotcha, he thought, and waited for the feeling of triumph to flare in his veins. Nothing happened. He just felt lonely, and sad, and sick.