Forgive Me Read online

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  “Holy guacamole,” said Lily, opening her front door with her shirt unbuttoned. Nadine tried not to wince at the sound of children shrieking over a loud television.

  “It’s me,” said Nadine.

  “Hm,” said Lily.

  “Can I come in?”

  Lily folded her arms across her giant breasts, but nodded.

  “I’m sorry,” said Nadine, when she was settled into a couch that smelled like pancake syrup and diapers.

  “So you said,” said Lily, “on your postcard.” Lily’s newest baby—a girl, by the looks of her pink pajamas—was asleep in the crook of Lily’s arm, and her two-year-old twin boys were watching a video called Hooray for Dirt. On the screen, a fat man in a construction helmet drove a bulldozer.

  “It was a year ago,” said Nadine. “Can’t we forgive and forget?”

  “Nadine,” said Lily, “I have three children under three years old. There’s nothing else to fixate on. Breast milk, crayons, and how much I hate you.”

  “But didn’t you have fun in London?”

  “Fun?” said Lily. “I took a boat ride down the Times. I had half a gross warm beer in some pub. The sun never came out. I went to the Tate museum by myself and I was late for the changing of the guard. I was three months’ pregnant, Nadine. I missed Bo and Babe—I came home a day early.”

  “Thames,” said Nadine.

  “What?”

  “It’s pronounced Thames.”

  Lily bit her cheek and glared at Nadine. The baby had to be six months old, but Lily still looked pregnant. Her hair was pulled into a French braid, and her roots were showing.

  “Have you lost weight?” said Nadine.

  “Go to hell,” said Lily.

  “Listen,” said Nadine. “Please. It was an important story. I didn’t have a choice. It’s impossible to get an interview with Marcos. It’s funny, Lily, actually. He wears this black ski mask…”

  Lily widened her eyes and shook her head. “I don’t know what to say,” she said.

  “I didn’t plan on it,” said Nadine. “I got us show tickets.”

  “Mommy!” said one of the boys—Bo? Babe? Lily ignored him.

  “Do you know what I had to go through to get my mom to take the twins?” said Lily. “I left my babies with a senile witch to fly over and see my best friend—”

  “Let’s have lunch. On me, Lily. We can go up to Boston. I want to tell you all about it. I had to go to this jungle hideout. Marcos comes out wearing a freaking Kalashnikov—”

  “Mom-eeee!” said a twin.

  “I need watch Big Bird!” said the other.

  “I need watch Fraggle Rock!” said the first. “Please, Mommy, pleeeease!”

  “I’m sorry you got hurt, Nadine,” said Lily, “but I don’t give a flick about Marcos and his kala-whatever.”

  “It’s a gun.”

  Lily expertly changed the tape in the VCR, the baby still asleep in her arm. The boys settled down with their hands in their laps. “I don’t know who you’re trying to impress, Nadine,” she said. “I’m busy, if you don’t mind.”

  “What’s gun, Mommy?” asked one boy politely.

  “I need watch Thomas Train!” repeated the other.

  “I need watch Big Bird!”

  “I need gun!”

  The din was getting to be a bit much. Nadine stood. “Lily,” she said, “my interview was on the front page of The Washington Post.”

  Lily laughed and sank back down on the couch. Both boys climbed on top of her. The baby slept on. “Meanwhile,” said Lily, “how are the kids, Lily? Do you miss the library? You’re staying home with your children. That’s really wonderful.” As she spoke, her eyes filled with tears. She spit out the words. “Do you still love Dennis? How do you breast-feed twins? I’m interested. Tell me about your life. You’re my best friend, Lily. I care.”

  “Right,” said Nadine. “I do care, Lily. Your new baby, she’s so beautiful.”

  “What’s her name?” said Lily, staring at Nadine.

  Nadine looked at the sleeping child, her mouth a tiny gumdrop. “Jesus, Lily…”

  “How old is she?” said Lily. Her boys moved around her like squirrels, burrowing into her skin. All hell would break loose, Nadine realized, if Lily had an injured wrist.

  “Lily,” said Nadine.

  “Flick you,” said Lily, cutting her eyes toward her boys, to make sure they hadn’t heard her swear. “Come on, sweetie peeties, let’s make some peanut butter and jelly.”

  “Flick me?” said Nadine.

  “You heard me,” said Lily. She placed the baby in her bassinet and took one boy in each hand. In the kitchen, she bent over the counter. Nadine watched Lily’s back for a while, then turned and walked slowly out the door. Her head ached, and she felt weak. The wind whipped and tangled her long hair. Nadine stood on the snow-covered lawn and gazed at the line where the ocean met the slate-gray sky.

  Clearly, it was time to start smoking again.

  Four

  On Water Street, Nadine headed for the Woods Hole Market. She walked across the drawbridge, her right hand wrapped in the long sleeve of her father’s coat, left arm bound to her chest. The coat would be perfect for work, she thought. It was warm and had enough pockets for a notebook, pen, and plastic bag. Nadine kept her passport and plane tickets in a ziplock and close at hand. Until the year before, Lily, who had been the reference librarian for the Woods Hole Public Library, had sent a small Moleskine notebook with information about every place Nadine was headed: a hand-drawn map of Ciudad Vieja with a history of the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity, tips on finding the best cheeseburger in Tulum.

  Nadine and Lily had grown up like sisters, as they had no siblings of their own. Jim worked late at Falmouth Fish, so Lily’s mother would take Nadine in after school, feeding her Chips Ahoy cookies and strawberry milk. On Sunday, his day off, Jim took Nadine and Lily hiking along Sandy Neck Beach. Though both girls dreamed of being detectives like Nancy Drew, Lily fell for Dennis and went to Cape Cod Community College. Nadine went to Harvard and then traveled four continents before NYU journalism school.

  Until the twins were born, Nadine and Lily still wrote and called constantly, reveling in the differences between their lives. But something changed after Lily’s frightening childbirth. The babies were early and sickly, and Nadine—traveling with the Zapatistas—couldn’t make it home in time to help out. By the time Nadine visited, Lily had already become someone else. She wasn’t interested in Nadine’s stories or the La Reliquia mezcal Nadine had brought from Mexico. Nadine spent the weekend cold and miserable, trying to feign interest in Bo and Babe’s sleeping patterns and weight percentiles. There was a new alliance between Lily and Dennis, too. Where once Lily had laughed about his dream of a McMansion and six kids, now she seemed to have bought in hook, line, and sinker, showing off her mini van and giant TV. Was Lily happy? Nadine couldn’t bear to believe it. She drank the mezcal herself on the bus back to Logan and made out with the man next to her on the flight to Mexico City, fondling him under the thin polyester blanket.

  Nadine missed the Moleskine notebooks.

  She bought a pack of Merits and made her way back to the Sandy Toes, jumping when she heard a loud rapping sound. It was someone inside The Captain Kidd, pounding at the window to get her attention: Dr. Duarte. He came outside wearing a yellow T-shirt with a salmon printed on it, his arms folded across his broad chest. “Nadine,” he said, “what are you doing out here?”

  “I could ask you the same.”

  He nodded quickly, his cheeks turning red from the cold. When he spoke, his words were frosted. “Left my coat inside,” he said. “Nadine, I’m serious. You need to be in bed.”

  “You’d have to buy me dinner first.”

  He looked bewildered. “It’s a joke,” said Nadine. “I’m sorry. I’m going back right now. I just needed—”

  “Some cigarettes?”

  Nadine looked down at the pack, visible through the plas
tic bag.

  “Anyway,” said Dr. Duarte. “Please go home, Nadine. I don’t need a dead woman on my conscience.”

  “Jesus,” said Nadine. “I’m not that bad off. I’m headed back to Mexico next week.”

  “The hell you are,” said Dr. Duarte.

  “I want a second opinion.”

  “All right,” said Dr. Duarte. “You need to lie down and eat. Go home and get in bed. I’ll bring you some fried clams in an hour.”

  Nadine blinked.

  “Onion rings or fries?” said Dr. Duarte.

  “I don’t—”

  “It’s freezing, Nadine. Give me an answer.”

  “Onion rings.”

  “Fine,” said Dr. Duarte. “See you soon.” He raised his bushy eyebrows and smiled, then darted back into The Captain Kidd.

  At the front desk, a package from La Hacienda Solita waited. Inside, Nadine found her dirty backpack. She sat on the floor and emptied the pack with her right hand: rubber sandals; Pepto-Bismol and antibiotic tablets; three tamarind candies; a roll of toilet paper; condoms; a jar of Nescafé (when coffee was hard to find, she stuck her finger in the jar and sucked the crystals off); a Nalgene bottle; a headlamp; a Swiss Army knife; three lined notebooks; two Bic pens; an envelope of tobacco; and a tin of rolling papers.

  And taped inside a composition notebook, the photograph of her mother, Ann, sitting on Nobska Beach. Even when she was sick, Ann had loved hiking to the lighthouse with a picnic dinner. She wrapped a warm blanket around her diminishing frame, a Red Sox cap covering her bald head. They would walk at sunset, the sky rippled with color. “I’ve never been outside New England,” Ann told six-year-old Nadine, “but there can’t be anywhere more beautiful than this.”

  In the photo, Ann was young and healthy. Her black hair was tucked behind her ears, and her hand shaded her violet eyes. She wore a green bikini and smiled at Jim, who was taking the picture. Ann’s stomach was slightly rounded with baby Nadine.

  “Knock, knock,” said Dr. Duarte, rapping on the door to Room 9.

  “Oh, hi,” said Nadine.

  “Why’s there trash in the middle of your room?”

  “That’s not trash,” said Nadine. “It’s all my worldly possessions.”

  “Oh,” said Dr. Duarte, “wow. I’m sorry.”

  “It’s a reasonable mistake,” said Nadine, easing into bed.

  “It really looks like trash,” said Dr. Duarte, taking a Styrofoam container from a paper bag. The smell of onion rings filled the room. “They were out of clams, so I got you a scrod sandwich.”

  “Fried seafood. What kind of a doctor are you?”

  “Believe me,” said Dr. Duarte. “Fried seafood is nothing compared with an amputated arm.”

  “Come on,” said Nadine. “It doesn’t even hurt that much.”

  “You’re on Demerol.”

  “Right.”

  “Eat your sandwich,” said Dr. Duarte.

  “Speaking of Demerol,” said Nadine, biting into the soft Portuguese roll, savoring the hot fish, the melted cheddar cheese.

  “No,” said Dr. Duarte. He sat on a chair in the corner of the room and turned on the television with the remote control.

  “You don’t even—” said Nadine, wiping her lips with a napkin.

  “Yes I do,” said Dr. Duarte. “You want some extra Demerol to add to your—” He gestured to the backpack. “—your worldly possessions.”

  “But what if my wrist starts to hurt in the middle of the Sierra Madres?”

  “Stop showing off,” said Dr. Duarte. “We’ll talk about it when you’ve sat in that bed for a while longer.”

  “Right,” said Nadine. “By the way, this is fantastic.”

  Dr. Duarte cracked open a bottle of beer. “You think I’m kidding,” he said. “Next time I come, Nadine, I’m bringing an X-ray of your arm. Haven’t you ever read A Separate Peace?”

  “The boarding school book?”

  “Phinneas dies,” said Dr. Duarte, pouring into a glass. “He dies of a broken bone.”

  Nadine dipped an onion ring in ketchup. “Dr. Duarte, how about a beer?”

  “You can call me Hank. And no, no beer for you. I got you an iced tea.” Hank handed Nadine the bottle, then settled back into his chair.

  “What kind of beer is that, anyway?” said Nadine. “Looks delicious.”

  “It’s my favorite, Whale’s Tail. They make it on Nantucket. Ever been to Nantucket?”

  “No,” said Nadine. She thought for a moment of Jason Irving, who had grown up on the island. Then she forced Jason—and his sad story—from her mind.

  “Too bad,” said Dr. Duarte. “The fast ferry only takes an hour. It always surprises me how many Cape Codders have never been. Ah, fourth quarter,” he said, finding a Patriots game on television.

  “I hate football,” said Nadine.

  “Well,” said Hank, stepping from his boots and propping his stocking feet on the ottoman, “it seems I have the remote.”

  “To tell you the truth,” said Nadine, “I don’t get football.”

  “You want me to teach you?”

  “No,” said Nadine, “I have some research to do anyway.”

  “Suit yourself,” said Hank.

  Nadine opened the newspaper and scanned the headlines. “Damn!” she exclaimed.

  “Beg pardon?”

  “Damn Kit Henderson! He got my story.” Hank hit MUTE, came over to the bed, and leaned in. Nadine pointed to a picture of three men in handcuffs. “These guys, they shot twelve little boys. That’s why I was in Mexico, looking for them. They were drug traffickers, like I thought. Cleaning up their boy smugglers.” She scanned the story. “Kit’s a stringer. He must have followed up with my contacts. Goddamn it.”

  “Nadine,” said Hank, “you’re lucky you made it home.”

  “Home,” said Nadine, bitterly. “Kit Henderson got the front page.”

  “The front page,” said Hank. “That’s what it’s all about?”

  “Now you’re a therapist?”

  “No,” said Hank. “I’m a generalist.”

  “Teach me about football,” said Nadine. She folded the paper and put it in the trash.

  “Well, to begin with, that’s the tight end,” said Hank.

  “You’re telling me,” said Nadine.

  Five

  “Please,” said Nadine. “I’m going. Send me to Lima. I can get in with the Shining Path.” Nadine’s hand rested on the newspaper spread across her lap. Her room was filled with papers, and news blared on the television. She had pulled the gingham curtains closed, and she fought to ignore the searing pain between her temples.

  “It’s a standoff, Nadine,” said Ian. “Nobody’s coming in or out. And I’m not sending you anywhere until you get your doctor to give the good word. Nadine, honestly. Are you listening?”

  “Ian…,” said Nadine. She drained her soda and stacked it on top of the other Diet Coke cans on her bedside table.

  “We’ve already sent Clay anyway. By the time it’s in the paper, we have someone there. You know that.”

  “Well where, then? Where do you need someone?” Nadine opened another soda.

  “Where do we need a nutcase with a broken wrist?” said Ian. “We’ll talk next year, okay? I’ve got to run.”

  “Next year?”

  “It’s Christmas,” said Ian. “It’s Kwanzaa. Hanukkah. The holiday season. Kiss someone under the mistletoe. Recover, Nadine. I’ll be in touch.”

  “You can’t—” said Nadine.

  “Happy holidays,” said Ian.

  Tucking the phone under her chin, Nadine clamped a cigarette between her lips and lit it with her right hand. She swallowed, and decided to play her final card. “How about sending me back to South Africa? When I took the Mexico City job, you made me a promise.” She tapped her cigarette on the scallop shell she was using as an ashtray.

  “And I intend to keep it. I know your heart’s in Cape Town, Nadine, but you’re not strong enoug
h to go anywhere yet.”

  “My heart? Ian, please.”

  “Do you have any idea how much you talk about it?” said Ian.

  Nadine laughed, blowing smoke. “What?”

  “Will Mandela bring peace to South Africa, what about the townships, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission…and on and on.”

  “Really?”

  “Everyone has a story that sticks in their craw,” said Ian.

  There was silence, and then Nadine said, “But seriously, Ian? I need to get back to work.”

  “Dear?” Gwen’s voice was tentative from the hallway.

  “One second!” said Nadine.

  Ian’s tone was kind. “Talk soon, Nadine.”

  “But—”

  “Good-bye,” said Ian.

  “Wait,” said Nadine, but Ian had hung up.

  “Nadine?” said Gwen.

  “Come in.”

  “Are you still on the phone?” said Gwen, opening the door. She came into view wearing a sweatshirt with a reindeer appliqué. In her ears were tiny ornaments, and she held an old shoe box.

  “No,” said Nadine. “I’ll pay you back for the long distance,” she added.

  “Don’t worry about that, dear,” said Gwen. “How are you feeling?”

  “I’m fine.”

  “I brought you something,” said Gwen.

  “For the love of God,” said Nadine. “Please, no more crossword puzzles.”

  “Well,” said Gwen. She stood in the doorway for a moment, and then she said, “There’s no need to be nasty.”

  “I know,” said Nadine. “I don’t mean to be. It’s just…Gwen, I don’t need mothering. I’m happy for you and my dad, and I’m just ready to get back to Mexico.”