Read Hydraulic Level Five (1) Online

Authors: Sarah Latchaw,Gondolier

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary

Hydraulic Level Five (1) (49 page)

BOOK: Hydraulic Level Five (1)
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Both
of us. Anyway, what we need is a new set of vows.” Samuel jerked, and I thought he was going to bolt for the roadster. I smothered a laugh. “Not marriage vows. Friendship vows.”

“Friendship vows?” He propped himself up on his elbows, his face dubious.

“Cripes, Samuel, I’m not proposing we prick our fingers and swap broken-heart necklaces like a couple of little girls. Just go with me.” I sat up, my hands beginning to wave with excitement as I explained. “True friendship is a lifelong commitment too, right? So why shouldn’t we say vows to each other for that? I mean, people used to do that all the time hundreds of years ago—blood oaths and all. Countries vow friendship to each other, too. And don’t forget about the whole ‘no greater love than laying down your life for a friend.’”

Samuel cracked a smile. “Are you quoting scripture to me, Trilby?”

I patted his shin. “Just listen. Having friendship vows would give us something concrete to hold on to when our talks with each other get really rough, like they did tonight. When you want to bail on me or I want to claw out your eyes, we’ll remember them.” I shrugged. “What do you think?”

“I think it’s a very clever idea, Kaye. Let’s try it.”

Pride warmed me like a radiator as I absorbed his praise.

Samuel opened his laptop and typed in “Calvino” (I’d have to tell him to change it, now that his password was pretty much public knowledge). A new desktop picture blurred to life—the two of us decked out in our skydiving gear, flush-faced and exhilarated. He flipped open a case and pulled out a pair of square, rimless reading glasses.

“What the heck, Cabral?” I balked. “When did you start wearing reading glasses?”

“Oh, these?” He peered at me over the lenses. “About three years ago. I should use them anytime I’m reading, but sometimes I forget. My eyes are tired, though, so my laptop screen is fuzzy.”

“They’re kind of sexy. Smart sexy.” He waggled his eyebrows. I flicked the bridge of his glasses and sighed. Yet another little change I was only now discovering.

For an entire three hours we brainstormed over our vows, laughing, pushing, cobbling out and struggling to define what friendship was. We discussed things we’d learned from our parents. We combed through scripture, Aristotle and Cicero, Lewis and Tolkien. We observed traits of the greatest friendships we could recall. I heatedly debated. He calmly reasoned. We compromised. And then we added “compromise” to our list, too. When all was written and grammatically sufficient for Samuel’s perfectionist urges, we’d carved our list to five vows:

1. I, [insert name], will make myself available to [insert name] when he/she is down, as well as happy. I recognize that this is a lifelong commitment.
2. I will provide emotional and physical warmth to my friend. I won’t suck the life out of him/her, but will instead offer encouragement.
3. I will fight for [insert name] and his/her reputation. I will guard my friend’s back, not stab it.
4. I will sharpen my friend, helping him/her to grow in character and in mind—I will always want the best for [insert name].
5. I will be honest and truthful with my friend, even when the truth is difficult. I will not judge until I have spoken with [insert name], and will compromise when necessary.

Samuel flipped his laptop to sleep mode and reclined on the dew-damp stadium blanket, the late hour and late nights catching up with him. I returned my head to his stomach, content as a cat. I’d been spoiled, having him so close, and would feel it keenly when I could no longer pluck him from his parents’ home on a whim. We hadn’t wasted these two months, either. The fights, the pranks, the heartache, the talks, even the kiss. I could see now, we’d regrown our roots. Broken through dirt clumps to keep our roots healthy. And the sturdier the roots—

“The stronger the Nixius.”

“Huh?” I was sure he’d fallen asleep.

“You mumbled, ‘the sturdier the roots,’ and I was just completing the thought. Molly’s care card, remember?” He patted the blanket for his wallet, opened it, and handed me the creased care card:
Emotivus Drownicus Nixius.
I skimmed Molly’s loopy handwriting, wondering.

“Is it really this simple, Samuel—the key to a strong relationship? The vows, the nourishment?”

He grew thoughtful, the coiling light of his laptop screensaver bouncing off his forgotten glasses. With his hair sticking every which-way and his glasses askew on his nose, he resembled a bumbling professor. And when he spoke, he sounded like one.

“In theory, yes—it is that simple. In practice, no. It will be very difficult at times, Kaye.” He didn’t ask me if I was ready for this, and I was glad. But the way he rubbed my back, so comforting, told me he had faith in us.

Hector had essentially said the same thing to me years ago, and it stuck with me. It was the day after Christmas, and my father and I trekked through pelting sleet to the Hispanic neighborhood for leftovers with the Valdez family. I was seventeen, smoldering and hissing like green wood. Samuel wouldn’t play Christmas songs on his guitar because he was exhausted after college finals. I argued that he’d been granted ample amounts of rest and was acting like a hermit holed up in his room. When he refused to humor me, I turned to Hector, hoping for a sympathetic ear. Hector didn’t humor me, either. “Look,
mamacita
, I don’t know what’s up with your moody boyfriend, but ragging to me about your relationship isn’t going to help. You need to talk to him, ’specially when it gets all rough and shitty…”

I restlessly shifted against Samuel, and decided I was ready to deal with New York, once and for all.

“Did you bring the letter?”

“Yes.” Easing me off his torso, Samuel sat up and pulled it from his pocket. “May I ask you some things?”

“I’d planned on it.”

Samuel fidgeted with the piece of paper as he rattled off question after question. What did I mean by “greedy and demanding?” How frightened had I truly been of him, of his wildness? What was the last straw—the thing that pushed me to file for divorce?

“The note,” I answered simply.

“Were the people in the brownstone kind to you?” His distressed eyes were shadowed by his hand.

“Togsy was a jerk. The rest weren’t unkind—just indifferent. Except for the woman who helped me off the floor.”

“Caroline.”

I blinked. “Wait. It was
Caroline
who got me off of the floor? Caroline put me in her room and helped me call Alonso?”

“Yes. Caro and Togsy.” His brow furrowed. “I thought you knew that. That’s why I was so confused last night, at the cookout…”

“Wasn’t she high with the rest of you?”

“Oh no. Caro steered clear of the drugs, called us a bunch of crackheads who would never meet our creative potential. She put up with a lot of garbage for Lyle’s sake. Anyway, she’d been shut up in her room, using my laptop to edit my work when she heard a commotion in my room. She found you in the doorway and got Togsy to help carry you to her bedroom.”

I racked my brain to place Caroline. “Are you sure the brunette wasn’t her?”

“Positive. The woman you saw me with? I only met her once more, just to ask her what happened between us. She ‘recalled’ a lot more than what actually happened, apparently.” Samuel shifted uncomfortably. “But Caroline had very short hair, if that helps. Togsy had a thing for pixie hair.”

Hmm. Togsy seemed a bit of a control freak, as well as a jerk.

“Kaye, do you still have the note I wrote to you?”

“I think so. Why?”

“I want to read it.”

It was my turn to shift uncomfortably. There was no way I wanted to see that thing again. “If I still have it, it’s over in Boulder. Why do you need to read it?”

“I want to see the actual writing.”

“Samuel, I’m not making up the note.”

“No! I know you aren’t. I just…I don’t understand how I could have written something so straightforward given the shape I was in. And from what others have told me, after you left the room, I was outside, jogging.” Samuel picked at the strap of his flip-flop, unable to meet my eyes.

“Oh…I thought you were in your room…” Bile crept up my throat. Jogging? I suddenly felt like such a naïve idiot when it came to drug highs. I’d been so upset by the note, not
once
had I considered its origins when I’d found it stuffed in my backpack.

“Maybe you dictated it to someone.”

“Maybe.”

“When I find it, I’ll mail it to you.” At the moment I wouldn’t, couldn’t entertain the possibility that I’d lived under the shadow of a deception for so long. But if it wasn’t from him, who wrote it? Alonso, thinking it would keep me in Colorado? No. Not possible. I shook the thought away.

“Do you have any other questions?” I asked, my voice cracking.

“No, I think I’m finished. You?”

“When did you start remembering again? Was it before or after I left the city?”

“After.”

I chewed my lip. “Okay, so you don’t recall telling Alonso to put me on a plane. But why didn’t you ask me to come back, once you found out what had happened?”

Samuel dropped his hand. “Would you have come back?”

“I…I don’t know. Maybe.”

He sighed. “I wasn’t in my right mind, Kaye. For weeks following, I couldn’t think straight. Withdrawals, confusion…I was really messed up. When I came down from my high, I was ashamed. Guilty. Terrified to let you see me like that, but terrified to lose you. So I made up my mind to pull myself out of my black mood before I saw you again. It was wrong not to have you there, and if I could change the past, if I could just have Mom or Dad call you and ask you to come back, regardless of what you found…God, I wish I could go back. But I was so hell-bent on being the perfect man for you, I forgot I just needed to be
your
man.”

Ire began to stir…not at Samuel this time, but his parents. “Why didn’t Alonso or Sofia tell me what was going on?”

“Because I wanted to handle it.”

“No, not good enough.” Alonso had to have known Samuel wasn’t able to make wise decisions at the time. Yet he’d kept me away—Samuel’s own wife. And Sofia…she usually deferred to Alonso’s opinion, but why hadn’t she seen what they were doing was wrong? It was jarringly off, the damage my former in-laws had done. This was not the loving Cabrals I knew.

Samuel saw the anger building in my face and he lowered his eyes, the familiar clouds signaling a dither behind that flawless hairline.

“Kaye…”

I forced my anger to dissipate and cupped his beloved face. “No more regrets, Samuel. Years of guilt and grief and rage is enough. So…” I fished for the Bic lighter between the folds of the blanket and flicked it on. “What do you say we burn this piece of paper?”

He blew out the little flame. “Are you sure you’re ready to forgive me?”

“Yes. If you forgive me for bailing and not standing firm as your wife. For not questioning your parents.”

“There’s nothing to forgive, Kaye.”

I flicked the Bic again, leveling stern eyes at him over the tiny flame. “Yes, there is.”

He relented. “Very well. I forgive you.”

Samuel twisted the letter containing my New York memories into kindling and held the corner to the flame. When it caught fire, he rose from the blanket and carried it to the diamond dirt, dropping it there. I joined him over the orange glow, lacing my fingers with his as we watched the letter curl and crumble to ashes.

When I was eleven, I was quite the stargazer. We’d constructed constellation wheels in my science class that, at any given time of year, would display which stars were up and which were below the horizon. The first clear, spring night, after begging my mother and Sofia to let us out after dark, I dragged Samuel to the baseball diamond. Flashlights, hot chocolate, and graham crackers in tow, we wrapped ourselves in blankets and waited for the moon to push away all traces of dusk. When the stars gathered enough strength to form constellations, we picked them out, wheel-to-heavens. Perseus. Cassiopeia. Canes Venatici. Samuel forever poured knowledge into his reservoir head, particularly stories. So for each constellation we pinpointed, he shared the myth behind it. Perseus, severing the head of Medusa. Cassiopeia, perched on her throne. Canes Venatici, two hunting dogs leashed by the herdsman. This constellation was rich with galaxies, Samuel told me, many of them real showpieces. As he spoke, I imagined billions of planets spinning in solar systems, spinning in galaxies, all contained within those two hunting dogs. It blew my mind.

But when we took the paper wheel out again in September, I was disappointed to find Canes Venatici missing.

“Timing is crucial,” Samuel had explained. “Not only the season, but the hour. Canes Venatici’s window has passed and won’t come again until April…”

Time. It ticked away so swiftly as, once more, we pointed out stars through drifts of cloud cover. Samuel folded his glasses and tucked them away. We talked. We slept a little. All too soon, the sky was a rose hue and we watched the sun rise.

BOOK: Hydraulic Level Five (1)
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