The Right Thing (26 page)

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Authors: Amy Conner

BOOK: The Right Thing
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C
HAPTER
18

I
t's a Saturday morning in April, a good day on the backstretch.

Up here in Arkansas, springtime has finally come and there's a sense that the trees are getting ready to pop into achingly green leaf any moment now. The flower beds in front of the grandstand are brilliant, with their banked azaleas and pansies, the rosebushes beginning to bud. Helen Wheels, Ted's sassy little bay mare, won her race last night, and so he was whistling when he left after he kissed me good-bye this morning. The April sun is watery, as though it's shining through a goldfish bowl that needs cleaning, but it's a nice change from all the rain we've had recently. With any luck, the track should dry out and be fast for this afternoon's card, meaning a good race for Triton and a big day for Ray and Stu, his owners. From the excited yelps coming from the distant hay barn, it seems Troy Smoot is engaged in rat removal—an activity that's made him a popular little buzz saw of an exterminator in the barns and tack rooms.

And a few minutes ago, for the first time this morning I felt the baby kick.

I'm sitting on the steps of the trailer, wishing I didn't have to do the laundry today, but if I don't want these jeans to stand up and walk around by themselves, I need to load the Ford and drive into town to the Laundromat. Since my first trimester has passed and with it the god-awful morning sickness that left me leery of even the smell of food, my appetite has come back with a spectacular bang. Now I've got only a couple of pairs of jeans that fit my ever-increasing waistline. No more size zeros for me, but I refuse to go into maternity clothes: all those smocks and elastic panels are so damned dreary that I'm considering wearing Ted's jeans until I outgrow them, too. This morning, one of his shirts—a gray plaid flannel that would have been a circus tent on me back in the days when I didn't eat—is warm on my shoulders in the still-chilly air and smells of Ted's cologne. I smile, thinking that my old saleswoman Dolly would swoon from the shock of it, seeing me dressed like trailer trash and sitting on the steps of a real trailer.

One of the grooms, Old Earl, distinguished from New Earl because he's been working for Ted for ten years, waves at me as he whizzes by on the golf cart with a bale of hay strapped onto the back of it. “Hi, Annie,” he calls. I smile and wave back. Yesterday Old Earl asked me when my foaling date was.

“Early August,” I said.

“Good,” Old Earl said, nodding his approval. “No racing in August.” If he and the other grooms actually get around to throwing me a baby shower like they're threatening to, I'll probably end up with a foal halter, a gift certificate to the feed store, and a heavy-duty pair of horse clippers instead of sterling teething rings, cups, and rattles. I'm not concerned since I know my mother and her friends will more than fill the breach.

For the weeks between New Year's and Valentine's Day, the day Troy Smoot and I moved to Hot Springs and into Ted's trailer, I had to have many long, tearful conversations with my mother before she finally agreed that I needed to leave Jackson, to be with the father of my baby. Still, she's determined to come wherever I am for the birth. It's going to be her first grandchild, after all, and I need her with me.

And I filed for divorce, but Du's contesting it like a man who's been made a fool of, and I can hardly blame him. Sometimes, doing what's right hurts innocent bystanders as badly as lying does, so Du's forty-page rant of an Answer to my petition for a no-fault divorce means Ted and I won't be married when the baby comes. I wish things were different, but I've had a lot of time to think it over and have come to the conclusion that I'll have to live with it. Du needs this, I suppose, and besides, life's been good to me. Soon, I'll be rocking my own baby, and not by committee either. For the first time I'm responsible for someone else, responsible for their life.

There's a crow's nest in the top of the pine trees by the clubhouse, and every morning a nesting pair flies across the track to the barns to lay claim to the spilled horse feed. As I lie in the trailer next to Ted in the pale light before dawn, I wake to their cawing, to the mysterious language they speak to each other. I'm told that, like swans, they mate for life. This morning, one of the two is perched on top of the horse van, soaking up the sun just like I am.

“Ock,” it says, a bright eye gleaming.

“Ock yourself,” I reply.

I'd love to sit here until Ted comes back from the morning workouts, but it's time to get the laundry loaded up. I stretch, get to my feet, and turn to go up the steps inside the trailer when there's a crunch of gravel behind me, the sound of car tires pulling into the lot.

I pause on the steps to see if it's Ray and Stu, Triton's owners, because if it's them I'll need to go tell Ted so he can hustle on over for some serious owner stroking. It's not them. The big white Mercedes with Mississippi plates plows to a stop in the middle of the parking lot like a ship running aground. The crow beats its black wings, taking lazy flight into the sun, and then a woman gets out of the car.

Starr.

We lock eyes, her waiting by the side of the Mercedes with the door open as though she might just jump back into it, me frozen below the metal steps of the trailer. Starr's wearing a gorgeous Arctic fox vest, a cashmere turtleneck the color of her eyes, and a pair of twinkling diamond earrings the size of hubcaps. Even from here, I can tell she's had the baby.

Without taking her eyes from mine, Starr reaches into the car and turns off the engine. “Annie,” she says in the sudden stillness. “I found you.”

“I didn't know you were looking,” I say. “You sure weren't last Thanksgiving.”

She smiles wryly. “Okay, so maybe I should have looked harder. I'm sorry.”

I nod slowly. “Maybe you should have, but it's all right.” It's not: we're neither of us seven years old anymore, and sometimes it isn't about sorry. I know that now.

Starr tosses her hair over her shoulder, that canary-diamond hair, and smiles her big, bright smile. “It wasn't like you think,” she says, her voice coaxing. “I know everybody's saying I married him for the money, but we're in love. Really, really in love.”

“And your baby?” I ask, raising an eyebrow. “How's Bobby working out as a daddy?”

Starr looks confused for a second, then comprehension smoothes her pretty, wrinkled forehead. “Oh, shoot. You don't know! I didn't marry Bobby Shapley, Annie. I married the Judge.”

My knees buckle, and sinking fast as a broken elevator, I have to sit my ass down on the metal treads of the trailer steps. “You
what?
” I ask in disbelief.

With a shrug, Starr walks around the Mercedes and says, “Can I have a sit, too?”

I move over, and carefully she lets herself down, sighing. Her fox vest smells of Giorgio, a fragrance I've never cared for. “I'm still not over havin' the baby,” she says with a grimace. “Twenty-one hours of labor. Little Brittany was worth every second of it, though. Yep, I married Otto in Las Vegas last Thanksgiving morning. Of course Bobby wasn't ever going to marry me, but after all, Brittany
is
Otto's baby.”

I'm speechless, but somehow I'm able to take this in without my mouth falling open, at least. “You're serious,” I finally manage. “You slept with the
Judge
when you were living with Bobby?” At this unlikely point, I don't care too much about sounding holier-than-thou.

Starr sighs and gazes off into the distance. “It wasn't for more than a couple of weeks. Bobby'd begun to have a . . . little problem,” she says delicately. “Me and Otto started up when he came over to the condo to talk to Bobby about getting shut of me, but Bobby wasn't home because we'd had a fight. I was upset about that and, well, one thing led to another thing and somehow Otto and me ended up sleeping together. Afterward, he told me he'd never done anything like that before. Me, I was disgusted with myself so I told him we couldn't ever do it again.

“But you did,” I say dryly.

Starr smiles a half-smile. “You know how those Shapley men are.”

“Don't I just,” I say. “They don't let go of anything, not ever, not until they're done with it.” I don't need to tell her about my own encounter with the Judge, about his dreadful proposition by the boxwoods at the country club.

Starr looks at her hands, at the enormous diamond solitaire on her wedding finger. “Oh, yeah, they're both tigers in the sack, honey—another family thing, I guess. Remember how I said you can't misunderestimate the power of great sex?”

“It'll make your best intentions into orphan dogs,” I say. “How could I forget?”

“Anyhow, after a couple of weeks of sneaking around, I told Otto we had to cut it off. He said okay, but he wouldn't believe the baby was his, not back last fall, not until Bobby told him that night before Thanksgiving how Brittany couldn't be his kid 'cause Bobby hadn't touched me in weeks. That's when Otto called and told me to get back to Jackson lickety-split so we could get married straight off. ‘No child of mine is going to be born illegitimate,' he said.”

Starr turns those pale eyes to mine, a tentative smile hovering on her lips. “You want to see Brittany? She's only a month old, looking like a three-week-old kitten she was, what with being born so early. My little Pisces.”

“Sure.” Actually, I'm dying to see her daughter.

Starr hops off the steps and hurries across the gravel to the Mercedes, opens the back door, and unsnaps a tiny, sleeping baby from a stupendously luxe car seat that looks as though it was made for royalty. Knowing the Judge's deep pockets, perhaps it was.

“Isn't she the most precious-est girl? Mommy's little sweetheart,” Starr coos as she comes back across the gravel holding the pink-wrapped bundle. I get up to go see.

“If she's lucky, she'll look like you,” I say, “and not her daddy.” I stroke the seashell fist, and Brittany curls her exquisite little hand around my fingertip. I melt. “She's beautiful,” I say simply. “It's good to see her. How did you find me?”

“Bette helped,” Starr says. “Otto said we could come on up here for the racing and maybe I'd see you. Your mother told me I should do it.”

Remembering my mother's story, the one she didn't tell me until it was almost too late, I can understand why. She and Starr are kindred souls. Of a sort.

“Ted's going to be glad that it's all worked out for you,” I say. At least, I think he will. He's the most compassionate man I've ever known, but he's not exactly Starr's biggest fan.

“It's so great you're with Ted,” Starr says. “He's one of the good guys, never hitting on me or anything, just acting like a friend whenever I needed one. I think I still owe him fifty dollars. Anyways, I wanted to ask you to be Brittany's godmother. Say yes, Annie. Please? You can stay with us.” Starr rocks the baby in her arms and looks at me, her pale eyes begging mine for approval. “Otto and me, we got a big old, brand-new French Provincial house with a ton of bedrooms, and the bathrooms have all got Jacuzzi tubs and cultured marble. Please say you'll come. Those Ladies' Leaguers have to act nice now that I'm Mrs. Otto Shapley, but they're never not gonna call me trash behind my back, no matter they're sweet as pie to my face. I need me a friend for when Brittany gets baptized, there'll be so many high-muckety-mucks hanging around, guzzling champagne, and whispering mean stuff when they think Otto won't hear.”

I think it over. Godmother? Then, reflecting on the Judge as this precious child's daddy, I decide she's going to need all the support she can get. So I say yes, Starr throws an arm around my neck, and I'm enveloped in a cloud of Giorgio. The baby wakes up, her eyes the color of star sapphires. My godchild to be.

“I just love you, Annie Banks!”

Disentangling myself, I tell Starr my own news, how perhaps one day our daughters will play with Barbies in the backyard, stand up against second-grade injustice, and vanquish bullies together.

“Jesus take the wheel,” Starr breathes, her eyes wide with surprise. Then we both cry a little, but even though I'm tempted, I don't tell her about the rosebushes and their secret, about the many heartbreaking years I tried to have a child, because that's something between me, Troy Smoot, and my mother.

At last, Starr gets ready to leave after I promise her one more time I'll stand godmother to Brittany, who's good and awake and hungry now. “I've got to go back to the hotel and feed her. Come on, Brittany Anne Shapley.”

I raise an eyebrow. “Brittany Anne?”

Starr flashes that big, bright smile. “I named her for you—hopin' you'd say yes. You can't back out now, Mercy Anne Banks.” She straps Brittany into the car seat and gets behind the wheel. Leaning out of the window, she says, “You're still my best friend, right?”

I don't even stop to think it over. “Always.” I wave until the Mercedes is out of sight.

Morning at the racetrack is done, and it's almost time for lunch. Hoping he's not going to want to share his rat with me, I whistle up Troy Smoot and we head to the barn where Ted will be overseeing the noon feeds, checking to make sure the horses have come through their morning workouts without a strained tendon or a lost shoe. I want to find him, to tell him I'm going back to Jackson one last time to be there for my best friend. She needs me.

It's not a mystery to me any longer. You do the right thing and then live with it, as best you can.

A READING GROUP GUIDE

 

 

The Right Thing

 

 

 

Amy Conner

 

 

ABOUT THIS GUIDE

 

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