Read Carpool Confidential Online
Authors: Jessica Benson
We coexisted until the kids went back to school. After the closet night, I was pretty much biding my time. Rick announced that they would be resuming rehearsals, now at Performance Space 6. I lived much as I had when he'd been gone.
On the second day after they'd gone back, Humphrey showed up, arriving at ten on the dot, bearing a bag of bagels and two deli coffees. I could not have been more wrong with my Columbo guess. First of all, he was more like somewhere between twenty-five and thirty than the close to fifty I'd envisioned. Second of all, he was a god. He looked like he should have been jogging down a beach somewhere in California with a surfboard under his arm, not sitting at my kitchen table with an old-fashioned notepad.
“Here.” I gave him all my stuff and a photo of Rick and tried not to stare. We sat down at the dining room table, where I told him the whole story, including the firing that wasn't and the weirdness with the house on Nantucket. Then he started asking me questions.
M.A. wandered through, late for school. “Wow.” She stopped with her mouth hanging open. I didn't blame her. If I'd strolled out, unsuspectingly, and found Humphrey sitting in the dining room, I'd have done the same. She popped her mouth closed. “Are those bagels?!”
Nice cover. “Yes,” I said. “Imagine that.”
“Oh, wow!” she said. “I thought so.”
I tried not to laugh. “Would you like one?”
“Sure.” She picked one up and said, oh so casually, “Hi, I'm M.A.”
“Who's late to school,” I said firmly, hoping to make a point of her major under-aged-ness.
She looked mutinous but dragged herself out.
He smiled at me. “Don't worry about her. I like older women.” And then went back to asking me questions while I thought
did he mean me? Surely he can't have meant me?
Letitia called right after the one about Rick's shoe size (eleven).
“So. What do you think?”
“Hot.”
“Excuse me?” Humphrey looked up.
“The coffee,” I pointed at the tepid cardboard cup.
He went back to scribbling in his book.
“We're not serious,” Letitia said. “It's more a friends with benefits arrangement, but still, don't get any ideas.”
I closed my eyes. “There are some things I just don't need to know.” Like, for example, that Letitia even knew what a FWB was. Plus, he clearly had not meant me. Oh well, I'd survived more crushing blows than that in recent memory.
“A woman can't live completely by the Rabbit, Cassie. Can I talk to him?”
“Sure.” I handed the phone over.
“Hi, Letty,” he said, his voice going all squishy. “Sure. OK. Right. Oh, absolutely. Dinner first? Sounds great.” He hung up and smiled at me. “So who's Jordan Hallock?”
I stared at him. “Our interior designer. Why?”
“Any reason she would be in your house on Nantucket?”
“No. Why?”
“My Cali case took me to Boston. While I was there, Letty mentioned the whole saga of the Nantucket house, so I took a swing out there.” He put a photograph on the table. “She answered your door. I hung around and took this later.”
It was definitely Jordan. “How did you know who it was?”
He gave me a look. “It's my job. Wanna call your husband and ask him?”
I nodded, not sure I could speak.
“If he asks how you know, say the Realtor found out.”
I nodded. Rick had a brand-new cell that I hadn't entered on speed dial yet, so I had to find the number. It took three tries before I got it punched in right. I wasn't really expecting him to answer, but he did. I could hear someone warbling “Can't Smile Without You” in the background. It occurred to me that the
Time Out
piece might have been optimistic. “Rick.”
“Hi, Cassie.” I could hear him speaking to someone. “No, that's the second scene.” Then back to me, “What's up?”
“Rick, is Jordan Hallock in our house on Nantucket?”
Silence. “Don't be ridiculous. Why would you think that?”
I floundered for a second. “Janice, the Realtor, told me.”
“Damn.” He sounded pissed. “It was going to be a surprise, Cass, and now it's ruined.”
“What is?” I was feeling really stupid here. I didn't know what to think or believe.
“I'm having the house redecorated. It's gotten kind of grungy.”
I opened my mouth to say I loved the house and didn't want to change a thing and how could we afford it andâ Humphrey was drawing his index finger across his throat, shaking his head. “OK,” I said to Rick.
“You're going to love it.” He hung up.
Humphrey looked sad. “Gimme a week.”
After he left, I took solace in writing my blog.
It was actually a relief when Rick called a little later and said he had to head out to Dallas to look at a replacement for the current set designer and would be gone for a few days. He left me the number of the hotel there and said to call if I needed him. I called Humphrey and told him where Rick was going.
Everything felt unsettled.
The task of dealing with M.A. was looming over me. But she steadfastly refused to do anything or talk about anything. Not only that, I was seriously beginning to worry that she was actually losing weight, which did not seem like it could be a good thing. It was making me want to rip my hair out by the roots. And where was Katya? I called her cell first thing every morning and last thing every night and never got an answer. Even for her this was a prolonged period of serious irresponsibility. I added worrying that something had happened to her to my list of things to obsess over.
Jared and Noah, after their initial elation at Rick's return, seemed to be sensing that things weren't right. Jared was clingy and needy, crying every night at bedtime, and Noah was belligerent. I was dreading telling them he was gone again.
Two days after Rick left I got a call from the headmaster's office at MeetinghouseâNoah was there. When I called back, his secretary didn't want to say too much on the phone. Could I come in immediately? This, as any parent will know, was not a request. It also made the hair on the back of my neck stand up, because neither of my children had ever been in any kind of trouble at school. Ever.
Noah, it turned out, had punched Liam, one of his best friends, in the face. He steadfastly refused to answer any questions. I could almost see the shrink bills tripling before my eyes. He was sent home with me for the rest of the day. “How come Daddy didn't come get me?” he demanded as I was walking him home. “He doesn't have a job anymore, does he?”
Good freaking question. “He's in Dallas, remember?” I explained.
“Can I talk to him?”
I hesitated, then thought,
Why the fuck not?
I tried Rick's cell, no answer, so I pulled out the hotel number he had left and dialed it. “Room 512. I'll put you right through.” Said the cheerful voice at the Four Seasons Dallas at Las Calinas, but that rang into voice mail too.
“It was better back when he was really gone,” Noah said as we walked into the apartment. At least then we could pretend he cared about us.” Then, displaying his new trick, picked up from M.A., he slammed his bedroom door so hard that something crashed in the kitchen.
The next day it was M.A.'s turn to be sent home for swearing at her art teacher. While I was sitting in the kitchen, mentally preparing for the showdown that needed to comeâthis was itâ Randy called.
“What are you on?”
“What?” I asked.
“You know, Paxil, Welbutrin?”
“Nothing.”
“Xanax?”
“Sadly, no.”
“Are you sure?” she asked.
“Pretty much,” I said. “I'd probably be feeling better if I was. Why?”
“You do know we're practically the only ones, right? It occurred to me the other day that the only way anyone could possibly deal with this stay-at-home mom committee stuff is to medicate themselves into oblivion, except I can't right now. So I started casually asking around to find out what people are taking, and they're all on something. Even Sue. Apparently she can't even stand herself. I think I have to go back to work.”
“I'd ask around the office, too,” I suggested. “I'm guessing the percentage is pretty similar.”
After we hung up, I paced around, waiting for M.A., who was talking a hell of a long time to make her way home and not answering her cell, getting more and more riled up. Until, finally, my conversation with Randy fresh in my mind, I went into the bathroom, dug Rick's untouched, post-9/11, now-expired Ativan out of the medicine cabinet, and washed one down. If everyone else was doing it, why not?
Ten minutes later, with M.A. still not home and her cell still going cheerfully to voice mail, I washed another down. It must have been because they were so old combined with my stress level, but they were doing nothing. Together the two of them had taken only the most microscopic edge off the anxiety, so fifteen minutes later, I took a third.
Which did not slow my reflexes when the phone finally rang. “M.A.?”
“Cassie?”
I almost dropped the phone. It was Katya.
“What's going on?” The connection was awful. “I just spent six weeks trekking and then another six in the ashram, and now it's like all the serenity work I've done is wasted. I'm a nervous wreck. What the hell is going on? I had to hear from Mom that you have my daughter.”
“Check your phone,” I said. “It's no longer taking messages, I've left so many.”
“Oh, I lost that. Have to get a new one, using a borrowed one now. I can't believe you let Harmonye leave school. I'm so stressed.”
“Gee, sorry,” I said. “I'd have thrown her out on the street if I'd known taking her in would increase your stress level.”
“It's not about stress, it's about Enlightenment.”
I laughed. “Who needs Buddhism when you can have Ativan?” I said, distracted by the thought that I might just dig out some of my old Grateful Dead discs. I hadn't heard “Box of Rain” in a long time. “Why don't you get on a plane and ask her yourself if you're so concerned.”
“Oh, I will. I'll be thereâ” Her phone cut out, so I had no idea whether she was in the midst of saying
as soon as I humanly can
or
when pigs fly
.
I called Randy. “You're right. We should all be on something.” And when M.A. did finally walk through the door, who knew how many hours later (good thing there was quite a while before I had to pick the boys up), I wasn't even aggravated by the angry, surly expression on her face. “Hi, honey.” I got up and hugged her. “I have good news. Your mom is coming, um, sometime.”
Instead of greeting this with pleasure, M.A. burst into hysterical tears. “When? Oh, God. Shit.”
“It's okay, sweetie.” I rubbed her arm. “It really is. I know your mom has her weak spots, but she really does love you.” (I hoped like hell I was telling the truth there.) “And she's not judgmental andâ”
“It's just I hoped I'd have things figured out”âshe was almost hysterical now, choking on sobsâ“the doctor didn't tell you?”
“Tell me what?” I suspected that even without the Ativan I wouldn't have been following this too well.
She got up and wrapped her arms around herself, pacing the room, sobbing. “This is just like so fucked up.” Tears were dripping off her chin. Her sleeves were pulled over her hands, and she used them to wipe her face.
“M.A. just tell me what, OK?”
“I want you to know I'm like really, really sorry, Cassie, about the liesâ”
“What lies?” I was starting to wonder whether being past its use-by date might not after all seriously reduce the potency of Ativan. I was developing the vague suspicion that three might have been two and a half too many.
“You're gonna kill me.”
I gave her a look. “Believe me, if I've restrained myself so far, it's unlikely to happen now.”
She gulped in a huge sob and closed her eyes. “I'm not pregnant.”
I stared at her while the world once again rearranged itself in front of my eyes.
“But please don't tell my mom.”
“I don't understand.” I was pretty sure my dimness was not Ativan-induced. “Did you have a miscarriage?”
She shook her head. With her long, straight hair tucked behind her ears and her sleeves over her hands, she looked about eight. “I was never pregnant.” She was sobbing again. “I was so afraid someone would find out, but I thought if you knew the truth you'd send me back to school. The doctor, she was really nice, but she knew from my blood tests and she said I was going to have to tell you.”
“But honey, why would you lie? Why not just say you wanted to leave boarding school?”