The new bar was called Swirl and it was decorated in light maple, with bamboo on the floor and large windows that let in the early evening light. It was only five-thirty, but the tables were already filling up with tourists and a few locals. Jamie from the gas station stopped by to chat before heading toward the back where the owners, a tech couple from Northern California, had put up some ping-pong tables. Jenny and Mary Ann sipped Chardonnay from delicate glasses and munched on candied pecans and walnuts from a little ceramic bowl.
Jenny tapped the side of the bowl with a fingernail. “I wonder if Phinneas made these.”
“I think Ivy made them. You know Ivy? From Lopez?”
Jenny popped another nut in her mouth. “Oh, sure. Well, that's good then. She has kids and all. Unlike Phinneas.”
Mary Ann poured them each another glass. “That he knows about,” she added drily, and they both cracked up. “Oh, God, poor Miranda,” sighed Mary Ann. “I think Phinneas was the one who put himself in charge of âshowing her around' Seattle.”
“He wouldn't!” Jenny's eyes widened over the rim of her glass. “What is she, Lilly's age? Not much older, in any case.”
“You'd have to watch him around Lilly, too, if she weren't your daughter.” Mary Ann plucked the appetizer menu from between the salt and paper shakers and spread it on the table carefully.
“I'd have to watch Lilly.”
Jenny peered at the room through the gold liquid in her glass. The wine was cold and a bit sweeter than she was used to. She could tell her cheeks were getting rosy. She felt good. As Iris, Ceres, and Juno, she and her daughters had few lines, but she was finding that there really was a difference being
in
the play, rather than just supporting it from the outside. Whenever the actors lounged around on the grass in the sun, she lay around with them and listened to the gossip about New York and L.A. and Seattle. Miranda and Lilly would giggle together or start up a game of Ultimate Frisbee on the pasture by the road, and one of the others, usually Trinculo, would pull Jenny to her feet and urge her to play. She'd acted modestly surprised that first game when Caliban gaped at her ability to leap in the air and catch a long pass.
“Clearly you haven't spent enough time around hippies,” she'd said, bending into a low toss.
He'd smiled. “Clearly not.”
Everyone had noticed the change in Caliban lately. He'd begun to sing along with what they'd taken to calling the Egg Lake Jam Band and even beat out a percussion rhythm with a couple of sticks. He hadn't worn a tie in weeks.
Now, Jenny raised her hopeful eyes to Mary Ann. “Lilly decided to stay on the island this weekend, can you believe it? Instead of going to Seattle with the others. I grounded her a few weeks ago, but if she'd begged, I probably would have let her go. She said she wanted to stay home this weekend and work.” Jenny tapped her glass lightly against Mary Ann's. “It could be we've turned the corner with Lilly.”
What she didn't tell Mary Ann was that Trinculo, at rehearsal the day before, had asked Jenny if
she
was going. Jenny took a sip of wine and let it trickle down her throat. She could imagine the kinds of women that Trinculo was surrounded by in the city. Gorgeous, stylish, professional women. Young women. And still, he had asked
her
if she was going to Seattle.
“Nah. I go to Seattle all the time,” she'd lied. The truth was, she hardly ever went. The deeper truth was that she was afraid. The bustle, the noise, the homeless, and the strangers all made her feel lost and anxious.
“She's a good egg,” said Mary Ann, about Lilly. “She'll be okay.” Mary Ann waved to Kelly, who'd hopped from her job at the craft store to the new bar just as soon as it opened. No tips on felt pieces, she'd pointed out.
“Hi, girls.” Kelly was wearing a tight white T-shirt and a jeans skirt on which she had appliquéd a variety of multicolored birds. “What can I getja?”
Mary Ann pushed her glasses down on her nose and peered at the menu. “Veggie tempura?” She looked at Jenny. “That sound good?”
“Sure. Whatever.”
“And the cheese plate,” added Mary Ann.
Mary Ann had recently begun taking pills for her blood pressure, and it occurred to Jenny to say something about her friend's heart, but she decided against it.
“My sister has invited Lilly to come live with them and attend college in Marin.”
Mary Ann popped her glasses back up on her face so she could see Jenny clearly. “That's wonderful, Jen. I hadn't realized that Lilly wanted to go to college.”
Jenny sighed. “I'm not sure that Marin County will be such a good place for her.”
Mary Ann pretended to find a spot on the table that needed burnishing with her napkin. “But you can't say the same thing about school, can you? Surely that would be a good thing?”
Jenny didn't answer. She gazed out the window at a couple strolling by, hand in hand. They were about her parents' age, she thought. Mid-sixties. They looked happy and well-fed and confident in each other's presence. The wish to have someone with whom she could discuss these matters of her childrenânot Mary Ann, but a real partnerâpierced her so sharply that she winced.
Mary Ann caught the gesture, and her features softened with sympathy. Her husband had died within six months of being diagnosed with bone cancer. It had been more than ten years since then.
“It's weird having Frankie gone,” said Jenny, after a long silence. “I think this is only, like, the second time she's been away from me since she was born.”
“That angel.” At the mention of Jenny's younger daughter, Mary Ann patted the palm of her hand against the top of her blouse, over her heart.
Someone yelled “good shot” from the back of the room, and a couple people sitting at tables around the women swiveled in their chairs to look. Jenny stood up and peered into the back of the bar in time to see Jamie chasing a little white ball through the swinging doors into the kitchen.
When Jenny turned back around she was just in time to see Dale striding through the front door. His face lit up with delight upon seeing Jenny and Mary Ann.
“If it isn't the two loveliest women on the island,” he said. He kissed them both on the cheek, but the kiss he gave Jenny lingered a bit longer and was slightly closer to her mouth. “Which is a statement I make with impunity only because my own dear bride is on another northern isle.” He pulled a chair back from the table and plopped into it. He looked like a sea captain in his windbreaker and battered deck shoes. He crossed his legs at the thigh. “She has left me alone, alas.” His face contorted into a comic mask of grief.
“How's her mom?” asked Mary Ann.
Dale's expression reverted back into its normal wry contours. “The old gal will live forever. I promise you.” He leaned forward and lifted the wine bottle at an angle so he could assess its contents. “I see you've gotten a head start on me.” He tilted the last sips of wine directly into his mouth from the bottle. “Looks like it's time for another.”
Dale carried the empty bottle to the bar and returned a few moments later with a full one and a dish of nuts commandeered from another table. “These are good,” he said, tossing a few pecans into his mouth. “So . . . how do you think it's all going so far?”
Jenny smiled. “I'm having the time of my life.”
Dale looked into her eyes and beamed.
“It's going to be great,” said Mary Ann, “though I think the part where Caliban appears is a bit dark, still. We should consider another flashlight.”
Dale waved her comment away with his hand. “Oh, you'll have to talk to Peg about that,” he said. He turned back to Jenny. “What do you think of Miranda? She's a beauty, isn't she? And Trinculo?” He rolled a swig of wine around in his mouth before swallowing. “Trinculo is what we used to call a fox. If I were a man of certain proclivities. . . .”
Mary Ann snorted. “I've never known you to be someone who limited his proclivities in any way,” she said.
Dale burst out laughing. “Well said.”
By the time they finished the next bottle, the ping-pong in the back had given way to music. Dale had pulled both Jenny and Mary Ann into a dance in turn. The band was playing
Turn on Your Love Light
and Jenny was being dipped dangerously low when the cell phone in her pocket started to vibrate. It might have been the wine, or maybe it was the swinging, but as soon as she felt the phone go off she was gripped with a sudden wave of nausea and panic. The music and voices and faces were blocked out with images of car crashes on Highway 1, the road to Mount Vernon. One word entered her mind. A plea. A prayer. An appeal to whatever gods might be listening. Frankie, she thought. Please let it not be Frankie.
It was Lilly. “Hi, Mom. Hey, where are you? What's all that noise?”
“I'm in a bar, Lil. The new one. With Mary Ann.”
Dale held his hands palm upward to protest his abandonment on the dance floor. Jenny grimaced, holding a finger in her ear, as she headed for the table.
“Is Mary Ann the only person there?” asked Lilly. “From the play?”
“Well, Dale's here, too. Why?”
“Nothing. Just wondering.”
Lilly rarely asked what Jenny was up to, much less called her to keep tabs, so that wondering set Jenny wondering, too. She tried to remember what Lilly had said she was going to do after work. She had been typically vague.
“Do you need something?” asked Jenny now, making her way back to the table.
“Nah.” Lilly did not hang up immediately. “Trinculo isn't there by any chance, is he?”
“He went to Seattle.” Jenny leaned against the doorway. How many glasses of wine had she had? She had lost count.
“Mmm. Miranda did and Caliban did. But Ariel and Trinculo decided not to go.” Lilly paused. Faint music played in the background. The radio in Elliot's truck. “Or at least I think they did.”
At least she thought they did
. Ah-hah. So that was it. Jenny raised her eyes to the ceiling, where a fan spun lazily. She would have to be quite a bit more soused than she was not to recognize what she had failed to grasp earlier: Lilly's staying behind was most assuredly
not
a sign of restraint and responsibility. Quite the opposite. She was scheming on Trinculo.
“Look, Lil.” Her voice was clipped. “I'm going to hang up now. I can't hear a thing in here.”
“Okay, okay. Sorry to
bother
you.”
“You're not bothering me,” said an exasperated Jenny into a phone that was already dead.
“Not bothered?” Dale had come up behind her and rested his chin on her shoulder. His breath smelled flammable. “Well, that's too bad.”
He grabbed her hand and pulled her back toward the music. Jenny did not want to think anymore, and she let herself be pulled. She dropped her phone back into the pocket of her cotton skirt and tried to keep her balance in the face of Dale's exuberant lead. Mary Ann was dancing with Ellen from the bookstore and David, who'd shown up without Jenny noticing, was jamming with the band on his harmonica. There were several couples Jenny had never seen on the floor now, clearly reveling in their vacation from office cubicles and endless e-mails. When he swung her around this time, Dale had to pull her close. The turn ended and he kept holding her there, clutched against his damp chest. It wasn't unpleasant, but it was a little awkward, particularly with David eyeing them over his harmonica. She tugged herself loose. Dale suddenly pressed his cheek against hers and said abruptly into her ear, “Peg wants an open marriage. She says she's feeling trapped.”
Jenny pulled her head back to look him in the face. Had he really just said what she thought she heard? Dale spun under her hand and did not look her in the eye. The song picked up tempo, merging without interruption from “Turn on Your Love Light” into “Hard to Handle.” Dale dropped her hands and shook himself as if he were trying to elude a stinging insect that had flown into an opening in his clothes. David's harmonica whined in her ear. Jenny let her body slow like a top winding down. Sweating and bouncing and spinning, no one around her appeared to notice.
Peg wanted an open marriage? She pictured Peg in her sweatpants and batik top, chewing on the end of her pencil. Looking sharply at Dale, she was suddenly suspicious that he was misrepresenting the situation by a cool one hundred percent. He gave Jenny a mischievous smile, which practically confirmed it. Of the two of them, he seemed the more likely to want an open marriage, in spite of what had happened with Puck that first summer and, well, okay, there was also Jacques from
As You Like It
. Still, that was more than three years ago. Dale flirted outrageously all the time. Jenny put her hand to her mouth, remembering how he'd kissed her on Shaw the summer before. Stepping forward, Dale lifted her hand and pulled her close again, then dipped her.
“You can't just . . .” she started to say, once she was back to the vertical, but the words died in her mouth.
Ariel and Trinculo stood in the doorway scanning the room for familiar faces. Ariel was wearing yoga pants and a tank top that was thin and tight enough to show exactly how little fat there was on his lithe body, how much unexpected muscle. His hair was covered in a purple bandanna. Trinculo was wearing black jeans, boots, and a leather jacket. He looked like he was ready for a night on a town considerably bigger than Friday Harbor, San Juan.
“I have to go to the bathroom.” Jenny slipped from Dale's grasp and wove through the crowd toward the dim, narrow hallway in the back.
She tried the door with the androgynous stick figure and found it mercifully unlocked. Luckily, she did not wear any makeup and could splash her face with cold water without messing anything up. But maybe she should wear makeup? She stared at her dripping red-cheeked face in the mirror. She was drunk. This was ridiculous. She wanted to cry. She laughed out loud. What was Trinculo
thinking
in his black leather and boots? She looked down at her home-dyed cotton skirt, with pockets no less, and at her well-worn Tevas. The only boots she owned were made by Redwing and they had soles caked with mud. She wished she knew what was in his mind. He had said more than once he wasn't interested in Lilly, he had been attentive and polite and always sidled up to her after rehearsal, and yet . . . he had never kissed
Jenny
.