“Sure. It was a great time. Jeff won the men’s golf tournament.”

“He was excited. He…had fun. Look, this is going to sound nuts, but do you remember getting a prize pack there? A kind of gift bag?”

His ice clinks again, a deep swallow. “Um, oh, yes. That’s right. Something with pictures, and a book.”

“That’s right. Would you still happen to have it, by any chance?”

“What’s all this about?”

I almost hang up, but I have to know more than I care what he thinks of me.

“Could you check? It’s important. And hard to explain.”

“Yes, all right. Let me ask Cindy.”

He clunks the phone down and I hunch over in my seat, a cramp of nervousness attacking my stomach. I take a few deep breaths and straighten myself up, looking out the black windows at the silhouette of the mountains that surround this Springfield.

A thud. A scrape. “Claire. You still there?”

“Still here.”

“Cindy had it. She’s such a pack rat.” He chuckles. A bag crinkles. “You want the inventory?”

“You still have the whole thing?”

“It was in her processing area. She has this kind of staging area where she keeps stuff before she makes it into crafts.”

“Right. Anyway, what’s in the bag?”

“Give me a sec. Okay, one mini-album of photos from the office, courtesy of Jeff. He used one of those programs, like a computer thing—”

“Yes, I remember.”

“Of course. Ha! Tom’s going to die when I show him this one.”

“Was there anything else?”

“Oh, yes. Sorry. There’s a macramé picture frame. That must be from that crone from the other Springfield, and a book of…poetry it looks like. Ah, yes, the golf girl’s daughter.”

“Would you mind…is there an inscription in there?”

“Let me check.” The pages flip. “Here we go. ‘I’m a proud mama.’ Huh. What an odd thing to write.”

“Kind of, yeah. Anything else?”

“A corkscrew from the hotel, but that’s it. Did you need anything else?”

“What? Oh, no. Only…did you notice if Jeff was…spending any time with anyone in particular over the weekend?”

He chuckles again. “You mean his dinner companion? I wouldn’t worry about that. He rebuffed her pretty hard. Though I couldn’t see why. Flirting never hurt anyone, am I right?”

I hear a voice squeak near him in protest. His wife, presumably, reminding him who he’s talking to.

“Sorry, I—”

“No, it’s all right.” I force a laugh. “Flirting’s fine. Did Tish…flirt with a lot of people?”

“Tish? Oh, you mean Golf Girl? No, it was that girl Tiffany, or Brittany, can’t remember, anyway, that new girl from the secretarial pool. But don’t you worry, like I said, Jeff shut her down.” He lowers his voice. “I think she ended up hooking up with one of the bartenders. She was hot to trot, that one.”

I force another laugh. “Don’t you go spreading rumors about her.”

“Who, me?”

The loudspeaker crackles to life and echoes through the nearly empty airport. My plane is starting to board.

“Where are you?” John asks.

“Nowhere. Could you do me a favor and not tell anyone about this call?”

“All right, if it’s important.”

“It is. I’ve got to go. Thanks for your time.”

“Anytime. And again, we’re so sorry for your loss. Jeff was—”

I end the call and look at the phone in my hand.

Is what he said enough?

Will anything ever be enough?


Beth shakes me awake the next morning. An angry face greets me.

“Where have you been?”

I open my eyes. She’s looming above me, her hair wild, shadows under her eyes.

“I left you a note. I wasn’t even gone for twenty-four hours.”

“I was worried sick about you.”

I sit up and hug her to me. For once, it’s not a touch I want to shrink away from.

“I’m sorry, Bethie. There was something I had to take care of.”

She holds me away from her, giving me a hard stare. “You went to see her, didn’t you? Tish?”

“Yes.”

“What did you do that for?”

“I had to. I was going nuts trying to figure out what had happened, if anything had happened.”

“And now you know?”

“No.”

“Did you actually talk to her?”

“Twice.”

“What did she say?”

“She denied it. She had explanations for everything.”

“What kind of explanations?”

I fill her in. She sits on the edge of the bed, listening, pushing her bottom lip in and out, in and out.

“Do you believe her?”

“I want to. I really want to. But mostly, I wish…”

“That you never knew any of this?”

“Yes.”

“I told you so.”

There’s a bark of excitement from down the hall. “Eureka!” Seth yells.

Beth and I run to the study. Seth’s sitting at the computer wearing a pair of board shorts and a ratty T-shirt. Tim’s standing over him, a big grin on his face.

“Hey, what’s going on?” I ask. “Shouldn’t you be in school?”

Seth shoots me a guilty look. “Uncle Tim said I could stay home, since he’s leaving today.”

“Oh, he did, did he?”

Tim gives me a slow smile. “I hope that’s okay.”

“It’s all right. What was all the shouting about?”

“It’s supposed to be a secret.”

“Seth.”

“Okay, okay. Jeez. We got into Dad’s email account.”

My heart skips a beat. I look at the screen more carefully. They really are in Jeff’s email.

“Why were you trying to get in there?” I ask.

“It was supposed to be a surprise.”

“What kind of surprise?”

“I wanted to get all of his friends’ email addresses, to ask them to send photos, to make this kind of collage for you. Like that AIDS quilt thing. It’s probably stupid.”

“No, that’s incredibly sweet.”

He ducks the hand that’s trying to pet the top of his messy head. “Mom.”

“Well, it is, but how did you do it?”

I look to Tim. I can’t remember if, in my panic yesterday, I told him I’d been trying to do the same thing. And if I did, how could he have let my son, maybe helped my son, get into a place that could hold something devastating?

“I didn’t,” he says, looking innocent. “Seth figured it out. Tell them.”

“I remembered how he used that word abacus for everything, but that wasn’t working. Then I realized that this email provider makes you add a number or a character or something to your password for better security or whatever, so I tried abacus1 and that worked! See?”

He angles the screen so I can see it. My eyes devour the long list of emails. Ones from me, from Seth, from Tim, his mother, his college friends. I look and I look but I don’t see her name anywhere, or even any name I don’t recognize. She’s not there.

She’s not there.

“Claire, you okay?” Beth asks.

I lean my back against the wall.

“I’m okay,” I say to Beth. “I think I might be okay.”


An hour later, I’m driving Tim to the airport.

“You didn’t have to take me,” Tim says, his fingers drumming out a pattern on his knee.

“No. I wanted to.”

“Well…thanks.”

“Sure.”

“Is it okay that I’m heading out? I could stay longer, if you’d like.”

“It’s fine. You have your life to lead, you should get back to it. We’ll be okay.”

I exit the highway onto the road that leads to the airport. It’s so weird to think that yesterday I was on this same road, in a panic, heading toward I didn’t know what.

“What about you?” I ask.

“Me? I’ll be fine, but I’d like…”

“Yes?”

“I’d really like to stay in touch with you and Seth. I’m going to try to come home more. Be a man in his life.”

“I’m sure he’d like that.”

I pull into the drop-off area and cut the engine. It cycles down, knocking in a way I probably shouldn’t ignore for too much longer.

“What about you?” he asks. “What do you want?”

I look at him. I used to think that he and Jeff looked so much alike, like brothers, of course, but something more than that. But now he’s just Tim, and Jeff is…I’m not sure yet, but he’s separate.

“I want you to be happy, Tim. I really do.”

“Thank you.”

He opens his door and climbs out. I pop the trunk. He removes his suitcase as I come up next to him.

“You know we can’t…” I say.

“I didn’t mean that. I wasn’t trying to replace Jeff.”

“That’s the past, Tim. Us. It’s what we used to be, and whatever happens, however I figure out how to be now, I’ve got to put all that behind me.”

“For Jeff?”

“For all of us. Do you understand?”

“Of course.”

He fiddles with his suitcase, trying to unlock the rolling handle. I click the plastic button that will release it and it springs to attention.

“Thanks,” he says, but he won’t look me in the eye.

“Hey, come here.”

I put my arms over his shoulders. He straightens up and stands immobile for a moment, then puts his arms around my waist, pulling me in.

My face is in the front of his shirt. Citrusy laundry detergent fills my nostrils. I hug him tight, counting to ten in my head, because on ten I’m going to let him go.

“I never stopped, you know,” Tim says. “Loving you.”

I step back. It’s been ten seconds.

“You don’t have to say that.”

He shakes his head. “And I wanted to tell you that, despite everything, how angry I was, how I took it out on you and Jeff, the crappy things I did, it was because I loved you. It was because I didn’t know how to be without you.”