Time Off for Good Behavior (31 page)

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Authors: Lani Diane Rich

BOOK: Time Off for Good Behavior
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She smiled, and I saw a faint blush on her cheeks.

So tell me about yourself,

she said, leaning back in her seat.

How have you been?


Good,

I said.

I left Channel 8.


That

s good,

she said softly.

I don

t think that place was go
od for you.


Yeah. I think you

re right.

There was a moment of silence in which a big white elephant named George sat down in the middle of the table. There was only one way to get rid of him, so I did it.


I tracked you down because I needed to talk to
you,

I said.

I needed to tell you that I

m really sorry. About what happened.

Silence. I took a sip of my tea and then elaborated unnecessarily.

With George.

Poof.
Elephant gone.


You shouldn

t be,

she said.

I let him drag you out of the house. I sh
ould have called the police. I should have done something.

It had never occurred to me for a second that she might not hate and resent me, that she might feel bad for not having done enough for me. Just goes to show, a little self-absorption goes a long w
ay.


No, no, it wasn

t your fault at all.

I felt the emotion catch in my throat.

That

s just... crazy.


I abandoned you to him.

Her voice was small and tight.

You needed help, and I ran away.


You had just gotten your life back together. I brought al
l that crap right to your doorstep.


I was so scared,

she said, and looked up at me as the tears spilled over her cheeks.

I

m so sorry.


No.

I grabbed her hand and gave it a squeeze, watching as her face blurred through my own tears.

I

m
sorry.

Gret
a appeared out of nowhere, dropping a box of tissues on the table, handing each of us a smile, then wordlessly retreating back to the living room. I grabbed a tissue and wiped my face.


You know, it

s not my style, but I can kind of see where you

re coming
from,

I said, nodding in Greta

s direction.

There isn

t a man in the world that would ever do that.

Molly laughed.

Yeah, she

s great. I don

t know what I

d do without her.

We sat back, wiping our eyes, blowing ou
r noses, and staring at the walls full of knickknacks. Then I broke the silence.

So you mean all this time, you really thought that was all your fault?

Molly nodded, and she teared up again.

I haven

t forgiven myself. I should have stayed. I shouldn

t h
ave let him take you away. I should have called the police. I should have pressed charges.

She heaved a staggered sigh.

He could have killed you.

I smiled.

But he didn

t.

She smiled back.

That

s right. He didn

t.

We clinked our iced-tea glasses tog
ether and drank, and I pretended that George wasn

t still out there, somewhere, probably still looking to kill me. The world could sometimes be a much better place when you didn

t acknowledge reality.

 

***

 


I

m going to count backwards from three,

the so
ft voice hummed.

When I get to one, you will open your eyes, and you will feel rested and relaxed, and you will know the name of the song you

ve been hearing. Three... two... one.

I opened my eyes. The room was darkened, and the smell of incense was cutt
ing a swath through my sinuses. The hypnotist, a small, wiry woman named Grace, leaned into my line of vision.

How do you feel?


Rested. Relaxed.

Grace smiled a toothy, gapped smile. She was a woman in her fifties who operated out of her basement. When
she took me down there, I half expected her to offer me a good deal on some pot. Looking at her, I still wouldn

t have been surprised if she had a stash in a back room.


Can you identify the song?

Grace asked. I leaned back against the sofa and rubbed my
eyes. I listened. The music floated in. The crescendo built. I hummed along. It disappeared.


No. Can you?

She leaned forward.

Hum it again?

I hummed it again. She shook her head.

No. Sounds familiar, though.


Yeah,

I said.

That

s my problem.

I pul
led out my checkbook.


Hey, Grace,

I said as I scribbled away eighty-five dollars I

d never get back.

How did you know you wanted to be a hypnotherapist?

She smiled.

The aliens told me.

I raised an eyebrow at her. This was what you got for picking som
eone at random from the yellow pages.


Don

t suppose those aliens can tell you what my song is, do you?

She laughed.

No. They can

t read minds.


Okay, thanks so much for your time,

I said, handing her the check.

And may the force be with you.

 

***

 


I am so excited!

Elizabeth placed two glasses of milk on the table and grabbed a warm chocolate chip cookie off the plate. Her face was bright and her eyes were lively.

The radio station is so cool. I only have to work between nine and three, and I have
my own office.

I dunked a cookie into the milk.

I feel kinda guilty eating the good stuff after the kids are in bed.


Get over it,

she said, stuffing a chunk of cookie in her mouth.

That

s the first thing you have to learn before you become a mom, or
you

ll waste easily three or four years just beating yourself up over stupid shit.

I nodded and dunked the cookie again.

Good advice, Dr. Mackey.


I

m not a doctor.

She dunked, then smiled.

Matt, my producer, wanted to call the show
Dr. Liz.
He was re
ally surprised when I told him I wasn

t a doctor.


Really?


Yeah,

she said, smiling as she popped a bit of cookie into her mouth.

He said I was so smart that it never occurred to him that I wasn

t a doctor. Isn

t that sweet?


Oh, man,

I said, shaking
my head.


What?

I laughed.

Nothing. I just can

t help but notice the special smile when you mentioned Matt. Is there something you

re not telling me?

Elizabeth flushed.

No. Not yet.

She grinned and took another bite of her cookie.

But he

s been send
ing... I don

t know... vibes.


Beware the vibe,

I said.

Whatever happened to that,

I

d rather be alone forever,

crap you were trying to feed me?

Elizabeth sighed.

Sometimes saying

never

or

forever

makes it easier to get through the day. And, I m
ean, it

s not like Matt and I are dating. It

s just that I

m... open to possibilities.


I don

t know,

I said.

I

m not sure it

s a great idea to open up your possibilities to your boss.

She chewed thoughtfully for a moment, then shook her head and grinn
ed.

Just because something

s not a great idea doesn

t mean you shouldn

t do it.

I held up my glass of milk.

Preaching to the choir, sister.

On that, we clinked our glasses and drank.

 

Chapter Ten

 

That weekend, the kids went with Jack to visit his mother, and Elizabeth went to Atlanta to see her sister. I scheduled Anne Marie, Bones, and various hired elves to run the Santa Station and had an entire weekend to myself.

The first thing I did was head
to the grocery store and buy as much junk as I wanted. Around the kids, I was trying to help Elizabeth set a good example, so I

d been up to my ears in apples and graham crackers and orange juice. Now that they were gone, it was all Doritos and Coke, pudd
i
ng and M&M

s. I was going to be sick as a dog and wearing sweatpants all the next week, but it would be worth it.

And, for old times

sake, I got a bottle of my old friend, Albert.

Friday afternoon and evening, I watched cable television. There was a twelv
e-hour
Trading Spaces
marathon, and about five hours in, I started to wallow. I was thirty-two years old, eating Doritos on a sofa that wasn

t mine, and watching neighbors decorate each other

s homes on a television that wasn

t mine. The only neighbor I

d
ever known in my entire adult life was Elizabeth, and I couldn

t even trade spaces with her because I was living in her damn house.

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