Read The Promise of Stardust Online

Authors: Priscille Sibley

The Promise of Stardust (31 page)

BOOK: The Promise of Stardust
9.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Surprisingly, Carol shifted and regarded me with her eyes full of insecurity. I never thought she required support from me. Yet her voice warbled. “What did you say?”

For a moment I hesitated. I didn't need to retract what I believed was the truth. “I said I love you.”

She lit up. We kissed in a way that was no longer only about sex. It was as if she'd been waiting for those words, those three little words. The funny thing was it had never occurred to me that someone like her, someone so poised, so perfect, would need the validation of words. “You love me?”

“Yeah,” I said, almost laughing, liberated by the revelation that had started in the recovery room the previous day.

“I love you, too. Wow.” She took my hand and pulled me off the sofa. “Come on.”

“Where?”

“I don't know. Let's run outside in the rain. Let's …” She threw her hands around my neck. “I don't know.”

I kissed her forehead, then her mouth, and I started undoing the buttons of her blouse. “You are beautiful. I should have said how much I care about you sooner. And as much as I like running on the beach, let's not do that right now.”

The story was in the
Times
the following Monday. That's how I found out that NASA gave Elle's mission the green light.

“Damn it, you could be killed,” I said to Elle, who was on the other end of the phone line. “It's too dangerous.”

“You don't understand how important Hubble is to the exploration of space,” she said.

A moment of silence followed while I searched for a convincing argument to make her surrender her dream. I never would have made it as a lawyer. “The last shuttle crew are all dead, Elle. For most of the families, there was nothing left to bury.”

Her voice took a solemn tone but one not lacking in conviction. “Actually they did find remains. And it was a terrible tragedy, but every one of
Columbia
's crew knew
exactly
what they were risking. We all do. I'm going. I'm not afraid of dying up there.”

I wrung my face as I stared out the window of Carol's Tribeca loft. The two of us, Elle and I, had each traveled a long way from our childhood days in Maine when we thought we were having an adventure walking the shoreline of the Harraseeket River.

“But—” I said.

“I know you worry, but I need you to be happy for me,” she said.

“But—”

“But nothing, Matt. But nothing. Just be my friend. Wish me luck and say a prayer or two if you need to.”

After my less than enthusiastic response to Elle's announcement about
Atlantis
's launch date, our weekly phone calls fell off for a while.

On Memorial Day weekend, Carol and I stole a little time away from the hospital, a weekend in the Caribbean. There were a couple of children, a little boy and a girl, five or six years old, maybe twins, sticking their faces in the water with snorkeling masks and ogling the fish. And somehow Carol and I started discussing “our” children, what they would look like, and how we would teach them to swim. When we returned to New York, we picked out an engagement ring.

My mother came to the city in early June to meet the Wentworths, wearing her best off-the-rack dress from Macy's. Carol's mother wore something not off-the-rack. Something designer. Couture. Nevertheless, Mom looked great, better than she had when my father was alive. She'd shed her matronly pounds, started running, and taken up yoga; small town or not, she held her own with the future in-laws in their Park Avenue penthouse.

After dinner, we gathered on their balcony. My mother stared at the city lights, one finger pressed to her lips. She withheld the clichéd reaction to the Central Park view. Instead, she said something that must have sounded completely inappropriate to the Wentworths. “Elle would hate it here, wouldn't she, Matt?”

The sky glowed that urban pink, devoid of stars. I knew immediately what Mom meant. I'd thought it a million times about New York.

“Elle?” Elisabeth Wentworth asked.

“Oh, I'm sorry,” Mom said. “The view is spectacular, of course. Elle's a family friend, my goddaughter actually, and she's like my own. She works for NASA now—in the astronaut program. She wouldn't be able to see the stars if she lived in New York. She's such a stargazer.” Mom scrutinized my face.

Carol knew that Elle and I had been close as kids and that we still talked frequently. Carol also knew that Elle and I dated for a while in high school, but she didn't know about Celina or that I'd stuffed my feelings for Elle down into the toes of my shoes. All Carol knew was Elle was a girl who grew up next door, a woman who remained my friend.

Yet somehow, I hadn't found a way to tell Elle about my engagement to Carol, and my mother knew I wanted to deliver my own news.

Mom turned to Carol's parents. “I'm terrified because NASA's chosen Elle for one of the upcoming shuttle flights. Next spring.”

“I thought hers was canceled,” Carol said.

“It was,” Mom said. “But they got the go-ahead a few weeks ago.”

“I had no idea.” Carol peered at me. “Did you know that?”

“I thought I told you.” I smiled at my future wife, who was so radiant she would outshine just about any constellation. And all I could think about was Elle.

After Mom and I went back to my apartment that night, I lay on the sofa, imagining how Elle would react. I dialed her number, and Adam answered with a throaty hello.

“Hi, it's Matt. Can I talk to Elle?”

He grunted.

I heard her whisper, “Who is it?” Sheets rustled. Her voice came directly through the receiver. “Matt? Is something wrong?”

“No, not at all. I have news. I'm getting married.” I blurted it out. Maybe it was like downing bad-tasting medicine in one gulp, except I was spitting it at Elle instead.

“Oh my God,” she said with a tone that conveyed more surprise than enthusiasm. “Just a minute.” I heard more rustling of fabric and what sounded like a door clicking closed.

“Elle, are you there?”

“Yeah. Who? Carol? You're marrying her?”

“Yes.”

“Wow. I didn't foresee that.”

I almost said that I hadn't seen it coming either. As if it were something that had just happened to me. As if I were not a willing participant. But the truth was that in a spontaneous moment I allowed myself to be happy again. With Carol.

“I didn't think you were serious about her,” Elle said. “But then, you've been seeing her a while, haven't you?”

“Two years,” I said, noticing her lack of enthusiasm and the silence that fell between us before she finally asked another question.

“How did you propose? On bended knee?”

“No. Nothing that pedestrian.”

Again, there was a pause, too much of a pause for the quiet to be comfortable. “Oh,” she said. “Pedestrian, is it? Well, congratulations are in order. I—I don't know what to say.”

Suddenly I remembered stopping at the beach and walking the length of it hand in hand with Elle. I remembered asking her words that I didn't exactly ask Carol. But with Elle, I did go down on bended knee.

“So … when is Adam going to make an honest woman out of you, Peep?”

She snickered. “You sound like my dad. Actually, Adam has asked. I'm not ready.”

“Why? Didn't he ask you on bended knee?” I tried to make it sound as if I were teasing her.

She cleared her throat. “It's not that. I have … other career goals. And …”

“And what?” I suppose I hoped she'd say she hated him.

She whispered, “I want children. After I get married, I still want children.”

“He doesn't?”

I heard a squeak, and I was uncertain if it was her voice or static in the phone line. “Anyway,” she said, “why get married if you're not ready for kids?”

She hadn't answered my question, but I didn't pursue it. I didn't want a picture in my head of Adam and Elle toting around a kid. Then she flipped the circumstance, and in her reciprocal question, I heard a tense undercurrent. “Will you and Carol have children?” Elle asked.

“I guess,” I said. That was Carol's and my plan. Get married. Have two-point-five children. And we would teach them to swim and snorkel in exotic locales. “It's strange to talk about this with you.”

“I know.”

I swallowed hard before I dug up the courage to speak. “I still think about our baby, Peep. Sometimes.”

“Oh, Matt.” She sighed, and I could picture her with her hand pressed to her mouth.

Adam's voice came through the receiver. “Elle, tell him you were occupied, and come back to bed.”

“Oh God,” she said softly. To me. Then she called to him. “I'll be right there. Just give me a minute. He's getting married.”

“Married? Tonight? Come on, Elle. I'm lonely in here,” he said.

Shit
.

“Are you all right?” she asked.

Sure, I was fine, if feeling homicidal was fine. “It sounds like you were busy. Good night, Elle.”

June 4, 2003

Dear Matt
,

You incited a riot. Adam's almost as furious at me as I am at him. Of course, that isn't directly your fault. But immediately after I informed him of your nuptials, Adam proposed to me
.

Again. Damn
.

Hey, babe, why don't we get married?

I'm tired of “Hey, babe.” I'm not a baby. And I don't want to marry him. So why am I still here? In the past when Adam brought up marriage, I said not until after I've left the astronaut program. This time he had an answer. We should get engaged now and married as soon as this mission is over
.

Right
.

Stalling, I said I didn't have time to plan a wedding. His response? He would plan the entire event
.

Yeah. He'd like that. Control this. Control that
.

So I replied that planning a wedding was the bride's job. An unfortunate choice of wording. He assumed I meant yes, I would be said bride. And to seal the contract, he pulled out an engagement ring. A ring!

I had to say no. How do you tell someone with whom you've shared everything for eight years that you never thought it would last forever? I suppose that makes me insensitive. He wanted marriage almost from the beginning. I told him I wasn't ready, but I should have said I'd never be ready. All he wants is his career. He doesn't want children. And I love my job, but I want babies, too. I want it all
.

Last month when I was late, just two days late, Adam blew a galvanized gasket. It's not as if I was happy about the possibility now. The mission had just gotten the go, and I would have had to forfeit my spot. God, that would have killed me, but I would not have had a choice. Thank goodness, I wasn't pregnant. Still, I can't believe that a week later he had a goddamned vasectomy—snip, snip
.

Talk about illuminating moments, epiphanies. Over the last few weeks I've realized how little respect he has for me. He didn't even say, what do you think about this? He just went off and came home sore, expecting me to wait on him. Right
.

But I've said nothing. What should I say? That I want him to be the father of my children? Again. A lightning-bolt moment. No. I don't. He'd be a terrible father. He doesn't like children, not even neighbor children. I don't want to marry him. So, I said nothing
.

In the beginning we were good together, and we're compatible for the most part. Shouldn't that be enough? Maybe if I didn't want a family, it would be. Why is this so difficult? I feel like part of me is surrendering. All this wasted time I've spent with Adam
.

I foresee a point when I'll want to leave Houston, when I'll want to go home and teach at a college. And then I hear his words.
Teach? In Maine?
What a waste of your aptitude, Elle. Adam rails, and I shrink. He said I was too selfish to apply myself, that anyone could teach basic physics, but most people couldn't understand magnetohydrodynamic waves even under threat of death
.

Okay, my brain is wired in such a way that I can. So? Does that mean I have to exist on a two-dimensional plane, focused on a single aspect of the universe? I want more. I want to teach. I like seeing understanding dawn in someone's eyes. Or is Adam right that I am not willing to make the sacrifices real scientific discovery requires?

I miss my dad and my brother. I miss snow and autumn. I miss kayaking on Casco Bay. I miss my life
.

And I don't want to grow old and reflect that I could have had children, but my career mattered more. I'm going to walk in space. Nothing will top that
.

Except holding a baby in my arms
.

I thought someday I would get married. Someday I would have a household full of children
.

BOOK: The Promise of Stardust
9.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

My Life as a Fake by Peter Carey
Vuelo nocturno by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Money-Makin' Mamas by Smooth Silk
Broken Birdie Chirpin by Tarsitano, Adam
Heriot by Margaret Mahy
Wicked Demons by Reece Vita Asher
Scandalous Innocent by Juliet Landon