Read Heart of the Matter Online
Authors: KI Thompson
Tags: #Literary, #Fiction, #General, #Love Stories, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Traffic Accident Victims, #Lesbian, #Women Television Journalists, #Lesbian College Teachers
“Puh-leeze,” the young woman whined in a high-pitched voice.
“I’d have to gain twenty pounds to fit into a size two. I’m a zero, but if you don’t have this in my size, I can go to the Juniors section. I’d simply drown in a two.”
Ellen sidled up to the cash register where her clerk took the black dress and her credit card. She envied the thin girl being able to choose anything in the store knowing that it would look good on her.
A size zero. How did any adult woman stay that small? She would never have to get a dress altered to hide her flaws.
“Wouldn’t you just love to be that thin and find clothes so easily?” Ellen remarked to the clerk.
The clerk glanced up from her register and followed Ellen’s gaze. “Are you talking about
her
?” She seemed incredulous. “I shouldn’t make personal comments about customers, but she’s made us crazy for the past two hours. Nothing but complaints.” Ellen couldn’t imagine what a woman like that would find to complain about.
“She says everything makes her feet and hands look big,” the clerk said as she wrapped tissue around the dress. “Like it’s our fault she’s a skeleton. Actually, a skeleton would have more fat, and more color for that matter.”
“You don’t think she’s pretty?”
The clerk laughed with patent incredulity. “I’d much rather have your figure and those great legs of yours. My boyfriend drools over women like you.”
Ellen would have attributed the comments to customer relations, but the clerk actually seemed serious. Surprised, she tried to find the right words to accept the compliment. She wondered what beautiful women normally said at times like these. No doubt they took flattery for granted. “Thank you.” She glanced around furtively for Linda, who waved from the lingerie department and strode over. Ellen noticed a splotch on the front of her GU sweatshirt, evidence of the lunch they’d shared earlier.
Linda held up a lacy teddy with faux leopard spots. “I think you should add this to your purchase.”
Ellen merely stared and shook her head. “Over my dead body.”
Kate finished processing the insurance forms for short-term disability, but delayed e-mailing them to her secretary.
She had begun to think she might exceed the time limitations and roll into long-term. Perhaps she should talk to her agent before she started sending in the paperwork. She glanced at her watch. Ellen would be getting back shortly with the few items she’d asked her to pick up. She also wondered if her neighbor would continue to do her shopping. Surely the kindness limit would wear off and she would want to get back to her life. But she insisted it was no trouble, and Kate did nothing to dissuade her.
Kate set her laptop aside and returned to her other boring activity, channel surfing without absorbing anything. Normally, she hated killing time this way and rarely watched television, except for her own news program, and that was a matter of quality control.
In her business no one could afford to drop the ball on image and presentation. To keep herself in good shape, she usually ran several times a week, but she hadn’t been out jogging in quite some time.
Her body felt flaccid and weak, a state she detested.
She couldn’t recall letting so much time pass without running since high school. She could almost hear her father’s voice admonishing her to get up off her ass and get outside and train.
Weather conditions made no difference. Rain, a blizzard, subzero temperatures, he’d still made sure she was up an hour before getting ready for school so she could run. And she knew the feel of his belt on her backside if she didn’t. Track was supposed to be her ticket to college, since they couldn’t afford the tuition. She had been thrilled to disappoint him by being accepted to Northwestern on an academic scholarship.
She didn’t stop training, and her first experience with a woman was with a senior on the track team at Northwestern. Merely the thought of telling her father that his insistence on her running led her to a lesbian affair made her feel better.
The doorbell intruded on Kate’s recollections and she crossed the room expectantly. She was actually excited to see Ellen, not just because she was in need of entertaining, but she enjoyed the sympathy and concern Ellen expressed for her welfare. She got the sense that Ellen actually cared about her, and in fact was the only person who seemed to feel that way. The thought that someone she hardly knew was her only friend depressed her. Could her life be any more pathetic than it already was?
When she opened the door, she was stunned to come face-to-face with her producer, Mike Spencer. They froze instantly, she from the unexpected visit and he, she suspected, from seeing for the first time the results of her accident. Shame and anger burned her cheeks.
She looked everywhere but directly into his eyes.
She didn’t know what to do, but it was too late to turn away.
He had already seen her scar. Mike held a large floral bouquet in his arms but made no move to give it to her.
“Well, is that for me or what?” she snarled, wishing she could evaporate.
“Wha…oh, yeah, yeah, this is for you, Kate.” He held it out to her stiffly, his eyes never leaving her face.
The awkwardness was palpable, neither of them saying a word for several moments. All the while anger boiled inside Kate, bubbling until she wanted to scream at him.
“I…I just wanted to stop by…and see how you were doing,” he mumbled.
“Well, now that you’ve
seen
me, you can go back and tell everyone how I’m doing.”
Without another word Kate stepped back inside and closed the door. She had difficulty breathing and gasped repeatedly, inhaling as much oxygen as she could. After a moment, she heard the elevator open and close and knew he was gone.
She looked down at the flowers and began to giggle. A small chuckle at first, which grew until she was hysterical. A catch seized her throat, and her amusement was replaced by sobs she couldn’t control. She wept bitterly, sitting on the cool tiles in her hall. She cried until she had no tears left and then put the flowers on the dining-room table and poured herself a drink.
She was working on her third scotch and had begun to calm down after her tirade, but she felt hollow inside. Now everyone at the station would know. She could only guess what the fallout would be, but she knew it wouldn’t be good. As if in answer to her question, the phone rang. She glanced at the caller ID; it was her agent’s number.
“Fuck.” She picked up the receiver. “Hello, Dean.”
“Hey, Kate. How’re you doing?”
“Great,” she said, knowing her tone suggested otherwise.
“I just got a call from the station’s attorneys, and they would like to meet with you.”
“Call Phillip,” Kate said, referring to her attorney. “He can handle it.”
“They specifically asked for you to be present.”
“Well, tell them I’m still recovering. They’ll have to meet without me.”
“Kate, they probably need for you to sign your contract. You never did, you know.”
She snorted. “Dean, I’ll tell you right now that signing the contract is the furthest thing from their minds.” There was a pause on the other end. “What do you mean?” Wishing she didn’t have to talk about this but knowing it was no use, she sighed. “Go to the meeting for me, will you, Dean? You and Phillip. See what they have to say and call me back.” She hung up without waiting for a response.
She picked up the bottle of scotch from the coffee table and poured another long shot into her glass. This was it, the end of her career. After everything she had achieved and after all her hard work, it had come to this. Were it not her own life, she would almost laugh at the absurdity. All the plans she had made, the benchmarks she had set for herself—she had achieved them on schedule. And they had disappeared in the blink of an eye on a rainy night on the Capital Beltway.
If she had only been early, or five minutes later, she would have missed the accident entirely. Three people had died and six walked away. She was in the heart of the collision, where the deaths had occurred. She shouldn’t have been one of the survivors, but here she was. Surviving, yes, but for what? To watch her career—no, her life—go down the shit chute?
When the doorbell rang again, she dragged herself over and greeted her next unwanted visitor.
“Hi, Kate.” Ellen juggled several bags and didn’t look up immediately. “They were out of Tide so I got you Cheer. I hope that’s okay. And since there was a sale on the bagels I—”
“Just give me the fucking groceries, will you?” Kate tore the bags out of Ellen’s arms and slammed the door.
Ellen’s ears rang with the sound echoing down the hallway. She stared at the wood-grain surface inches from her face, wondering what she’d done wrong.
It was the Tide, had to be. No, Kate wouldn’t
get all bent out of shape over detergent…would she?
Ellen felt dazed as she stumbled down the hall. General Beauregard ran to her as soon as she stepped inside, rubbing against her as usual. She picked him up and hugged him to her chest, agonizing over what she’d done to cause Kate’s outburst. She examined every word repeatedly, including the discussion they’d had earlier that day about what Kate needed. No matter how many times she revisited each scene, she was still mystified as to what had set Kate off.
“Come on, PGT.” She kissed Beau on the top of his head. “You and I need a treat to make us feel better.” She went into the kitchen, dropped him on the counter, and tried to decide what she felt like eating. The refrigerator revealed a takeout box of fettuccine Alfredo from the lunch she’d shared with Linda when they were shopping on Wednesday. Her stomach grumbled and she contemplated making a salad to go along with the pasta.
But as she removed the carton from the refrigerator, she thought of the sexy new black dress hanging in her closet. Images assaulted her mind. She could see herself in that dressing room mirror, pale flesh in all directions. Her date with Sandra was in two days and she had done nothing to improve her condition. Her stomach coiled again, this time with unease, not appetite. Tossing the takeout into the trash, she decided today would be salad only.
She washed some lettuce and set out the carrots, cucumber, and tomato, but as she began to chop, her flimsy enthusiasm waned.
She couldn’t help but think about Kate’s behavior. Maybe she was angry about Ellen’s intrusion into her life and just wanted to be left alone. If so, she could have raised the topic politely. There was no reason to curse and slam the door in her face. Ellen had done nothing to warrant that type of conduct, and the more she thought about it, the more the outburst upset her. She couldn’t believe how out of proportion Kate’s reaction had been. She’d agreed to their arrangement, even putting grocery lists together for specific items she would need. If she wanted to stop, all she had to do was say so.
Whatever Ellen’s imagined faux pas, she certainly didn’t deserve such rude, unfair treatment. She was only trying to help.
How dare
Kate speak to me that way?
She tossed the knife onto the chopping board, wiped her hands on the kitchen towel, and located a notepad and pen. Angrily, she jotted a brief note.
Kate,
I’m sorry about the tough time you’re having, but I’m
not your punching bag. If you’d like some groceries again
and think you can show basic courtesy, give me a call. I
won’t knock on your door in the future unless invited. I
hope you feel better soon.
Ellen
She ripped the page off the notepad, folded it in half, and marched out of her condo. Striding down the hall, she discovered that her eyes were prickling. She had allowed herself to imagine a friendship, even picturing the two of them going out occasionally once Kate was better. She had envisioned evenings together at the theater or out at dinner, behaving like close, caring neighbors.
Admittedly, she had also fantasized that their relationship might evolve with time. Even if the thoughts were unrealistic, she couldn’t help wishing Kate saw her as more than just a neighbor. Ever since Ellen first began watching her on TV, Kate had drawn a powerful physical and emotional response from her. Now that they were in contact more often, it was self-delusional to pretend she felt nothing.
And she did not indulge in self-delusion.
She paused at Kate’s door, her emotions in a muddle. For a split second she almost knocked, then recalled Kate’s face contorted with anger, those penetrating green eyes blazing contemptuously. Hurt engulfed her like an acid tide, eating away at her self-confidence.
With a bitter sigh, she crouched and shoved the note under Kate’s door, then escaped quickly along the hallway.
Her heart was still pounding erratically ten minutes later when she poured herself a glass of wine and deposited her freshly made salad on the table. She pondered the meal and decided that she wasn’t hungry after all. Doubt crawled from her throat to her gut. She had acted rashly toward a woman who had been through a terrible ordeal. How could she be so insensitive to Kate’s plight? Her frustration was a natural reaction to a situation beyond her control. It was bound to spill over sometime, misdirected at whoever happened to be there.
Ellen wished she’d waited to calm down before delivering that note. She wondered if Kate had noticed it yet. Maybe she was watching television, or sleeping. Ellen tried to think of a way to get the note back. If she slid a coat hanger under Kate’s door, perhaps she could hook it. How could she have done such a stupid thing? What would her mother think of her lack of manners? Ellen cringed.
The thought also pulled her up short. Her mother’s birthday party was in two days and she hadn’t even looked for a gift. She was responsible for the dessert as well, so she’d better stop at Marvelous Market after work tomorrow. She picked up her fork and stabbed a slice of cucumber. To hell with Kate. She needed to focus on Sandra and on looking good for their date. If it meant eating nothing but rabbit food from now on, so be it.
Ellen pulled into the driveway of the brownstone in Alexandria, Virginia, and parked behind her sister’s minivan. Her parents had lived in this house her entire life, and she and her sister Joan had grown up here in rooms filled with Webster family history. Ellen always loved to visit, even when she had to endure Joan’s company as well. Today was their mother’s birthday and, like all other family occasions, they celebrated it together.