Jake’s Hand
Part 10
Before the Storm
It was late in the afternoon of the next day. “Dad, we’ve got to talk
again,” Alec said at the other end of the telephone.
“Sure, come on over.”
“Is Jake there?”
“No, he’s working late.” I said. As usual, I said to myself. Too
usual.
“Good. I’ll be over in 10 minutes.” This time I did take that shot
of brandy, fussed around the kitchen a few minutes and finally moved to the
living room couch.
He breezed through the door 10 minutes later, tossing his bike helmet on the
chair. Alec always breezes through doors. Maybe that was the 13
going on 10 part of him. He was dressed in navy-blue shorts, a grey
t-shirt with sweat down the middle, tennis shoes without socks and a baseball
cap with the bill bent into an exaggerated curve. Typical teenager.
He either ran or rode his bike over. He never just walked. God, I
wished I still had his energy.
“Let me get something to drink,” he said. “I’ll be right back.”
Alec went into the kitchen and brought back two glasses of lemonade. He
set one down in front of me. It was a role reversal from the previous
day—a signal that he was in charge of this conversation.
“I’ve done a lot of thinking in the past day,” Alec said after he settled
in. “About you, about me, about us, about Jake. When you and mom
divorced, you said we could move back and forth freely between your condo and
mom’s house. That promise has been an important part of my relationship
with you and mom. I don’t want to give up that freedom and
flexibility. It’s really important. Do you understand?”
I nodded.
“Which gets me to the reason I wanted to talk to you. I’m going to come back
to my room again.” It was an announcement with the hint both of defiance and
question, as if he was daring me to deny him. “It’s my room and I want it
to stay that way. If things don’t work out, I can move back to Mom’s.
“I need to say something else—a bit more personal.” He paused.
“I’ve tried to like Jake, and I do—I guess. He’s a pleasant enough person, and
I know you’ve been happy recently, which is really important to me, so I
promise to be tolerant.” He paused. “But I don’t feel I ever fully
communicate with Jake. We get close and then he backs off as if I were a
leper. I can’t figure him out, and I can’t break through his shield,
dad. I’ve tried. And I’ll keep trying—for your sake.”
“Thanks for laying things out, Alec. Jake will only be here for another
week or two, so keep your cool for that long. Will you?” Alec nodded his
assent. Of course, this was a white lie, because Jake was going to be
coming back to Seattle. I’d decided to deal with that problem later.
Jake moved the rest of his things out of Alec’s bedroom and into mine for the
remainder of his stay in Seattle. I called Alec and told him his room was
free; he was more than ready to move back in. We managed to adapt to sharing
the condo with Alec, with little effect on the intimate part of our
lives. The condo is blessedly well sound-insulated.
Boston Interlude
At the end of the week I took Jake to the airport for his plane to Boston,
wondering what this interlude would do to our relationship. We went to
the Northwest Airlines gate. They announced the boarding of his plane, and he
came up to me and kissed me quickly on the lips. That caused me to look
quickly around to see if anyone else had noticed. Then, he gave me a big
hug. “Settle down, lover,” he whispered, chuckling. Nobody came up
to us pounding the Old Testament, so I assumed that if anyone saw it they
didn’t care. But, I still wasn’t ready for everything a longer-term
relationship required, much as I thought I wanted it.
But my thoughts were diverted and I laughed to myself once again as I saw him
wrestle the overstuffed ancient knapsack down the runway, bringing back
memories of his arrival in Mississippi.
Jake and I talked every night on the phone. The first days’ conversations
seemed formal and constrained, but as the weeks went on our talking grew more
relaxed, then intimate until, at the end, we were like two sex-crazed
teen-agers. It was really disgusting—and really fun. Ultimately, we
talked about almost everything: business and world affairs and movies and
miscellaneous and sex and sex. We never got down to the issue of what was to
happen when Jake came back to Seattle, of our relationship. We both
understood, I thought, that that decision was mine.
What I realized as his stay in Boston lengthened is how much I missed Jake,
partly because of him and partly because I enjoyed an adult relationship—and
intimacy—not just the sex, but the closeness, the touches, the bumps in the day
and night. I missed the after-work bike rides, the dinners and the
movies. I missed him—his quirks, his grins, his smiles, his laughs, and I
even missed those brief moments of haunting sadness that came upon him at times
I could never predict and his subsequent struggles to hide his eyes until he
regained his composure. I missed this extraordinarily good looking, sexy
person beside me at night. I guess I really did miss the sex.
My conclusion of what to do was daily becoming evident to me—I wanted him to
move back in with me—and I would have to learn to deal with the world, and he
and Alec would have to get along. Whether it was love or sex or a
combination of the two I did not know. What I didn’t know, also, is how
long I wanted our relationship to go on or how I would deal with Alec, but I
decided I would cross that bridge when I came to it. I did know my
short-term fling, my short-term fantasy was over.
So one night, at the end of one of our phone calls, I said: “Sawyer, I
have something to say.” There was a long pause as I gathered my courage
to say it. “I want you to move back in with me when you get back to
Seattle.” There was a long silence at the other end of the phone. I
held my breath. I couldn’t see his face or gauge his body language, so I
had no clue as to what response I was likely to get. I started to get
nervous. I didn’t have to.
He responded, simply: “You don’t know how much I want and need
that. I love you, Robbie. God, how I love you.” I heard what I thought
were sobs at the other end of the telephone line.
* * *
The talk with Alec went better than I would have thought. “Whatever makes
you happy, Dad. That’s what I want. By the way, I’m not surprised.”
“Thanks, Alec.” I called Anne to tell her what was happening as
well. She sounded happy for me, or maybe that is what I wanted to
believe.
Late Night Knock at the Door
One night a couple of weeks later, I heard pounding on the door. I looked
at the clock, and it was 3 in the morning. Alec had been on his way to
bed the last time I saw him, and I hadn’t heard him go out. However, I
felt a momentary trepidation. It was the same feeling that one gets when
the phone rings in the middle of the night. Is it terrible news?
Has somebody died or been injured, or is it just a wrong number?
Thankfully, it’s more often the latter. I realize the pounding at the
door was probably too insistent to be a bearer of bad news; the police, after
all, must be given sensitivity training, and surely knocking politely is one of
the rules. I thought maybe somebody needed help.
I jumped out of bed, pulled on some pants, skipping the underwear
and went to the front door. I opened Alec’s bedroom door on the way
down, but he was still asleep as I expected, apparently not hearing any of the
pounding. I flipped on the porch light and opened the front door
carefully, not knowing what was on the other side. On the other side was
Jake—disheveled, with a two-day growth of beard. I had talked to him on
the phone only ten hours before. He had been 800 miles away, on the
Wyoming border. I did the easy miles per hour calculation.
“I am madly in love, I need you and I’m horny,” he said.
“I trust it’s in that order.”
“Yes, in that order. I couldn’t wait a day.” Looking at him
all sexy from travel, I might have reversed the order at that moment. I
was growing happy to see him, as Mae West might have said--and he noticed the
pistol in my pocket.
He came up and kissed me on the lips, pulled me to him and crushed his pelvis
against mine.
“What about the madly in love and needing me and the rest of the platonic
parts?” I asked.
Jake ignored me. “I drove like a maniac to get here—not for the platonic
parts. I had to talk my way out of only one ticket.” He had
averaged 80 miles an hour, with a stop for a ticket. Hmm!
Jake’s car was parked in the driveway—a gray Honda Civic a few years past
new—stuffed with, apparently, most of the rest of Jake’s worldly
possessions. I noticed Jake had lost some of his burnished color during
his Boston stay, and a haircut had removed the sun-lightened hair. He
must not have gotten much bike riding done in Boston.
“Let me take a 30 second shower and let’s go to bed,” Jake said. “I’ll
unload in the morning.” Actually, I expected us both to unload shortly
but I didn’t say anything. Jake pushed me up the stairs to my bedroom,
flipping off lights as he went by, and I undid his headband on the way,
dropping it on the stair. He popped into the shower and was out before I
could get a clean pillowcase on. I didn’t think it was possible to take a
30 second shower, but I guess it was.
Well, we solved the horniness problem pretty quickly, and then we solved
it again, a bit more languorously, till we fell asleep—just before the alarm
went off, alas.
With Jake’s return to Seattle permanently, the course of my love life was
sealed—at least for the near future. I had loved the Jake of 14 years
earlier. Could I still love this person of today with that dark side that
arose from time to time? Did I have the will or the courage or the energy
to make our relationship last? As I drove to work the next morning,
I concluded that I didn’t know and that I needed to let time take its course.
Calm Before the Storm
So began a strange year in my relationship with my lover and my son.
Jake’s work schedule saw him leaving the condo at 7 in the morning and
returning after 9 at night—usually six days a week. Alec rose at 7:30 for
school and was in his room studying by 9 at night. The result was that
there was virtually no time for any significant contact between Jake and
Alec.
I was the bridge—the conduit—between them, but direct contact was
limited. I realize now that maybe that was for the better. In the
mornings, I would wake with Jake, have coffee with him, then make breakfast for
Alec and myself before heading off to an early start at work. I would
make (or buy) dinner for all three of us, but Alec and I would eat at the
normal time, and Jake would eat microwave-warmed food later. When we
watched television, Alec would sit on the floor between my legs, and I would
massage his shoulders and back, until he went to his bedroom to do
homework. An hour later, Jake would be sitting in the same place, me
massaging the tension from his back and shoulders and untying one of the batik
bands he used to keep his hair in place so that I could run my hands through
his hair. Often—too often—he would fall asleep against my leg from
exhaustion, and I would lead him up to bed.
I didn’t think about it until later, but this life was lived as if I was
turning on the television in the morning to the Jake Channel, then turning to
another channel for Alec. In the evening the process would be
reversed. I realize now that my relationships were almost perfectly
compartmentalized. At the time, my only thought was that I regretted only
that my son and Jake never really had a chance to really know each other.
Our Trip to Boston
I heard Jake’s key scrape in the door one evening in late October.
“Hi! How was your day?” he asked as he came over and kissed me before flopping
down on the easy chair across from me. I was expecting the ‘hi’ and then
his normal state of exhaustion.
“Fine. You’re home early.” It was 7:30 instead of 9, so that
qualified as early. Alec was at his mother’s. “How was yours?”
“Great.”
“Can I get you a glass of wine?”
“Please. I’d love one.”
I went to the kitchen and poured us each a glass of chardonnay from the bottle
in the refrigerator. I returned to the living room and handed Jake
his glass and then sat down opposite him.
Jake had pulled an envelope from his shirt pocket and was tapping it on
its side on the coffee table between us. “We’re caught up enough at work
for me to take a long weekend off,” he said. The prospect of going
someplace for a weekend sounded appealing to me. Maybe we could go to the
wine country in Oregon, I suggested. I raised my eyebrows Groucho Marx
style and put my mouth around an imaginary cigar—or, since I didn’t smoke,
something that might resemble a cigar. I already had all the arrangements
made in my mind. Alec could stay with his mother. We would get out
of town early Friday afternoon, drive to Portland, etc.
Jake shook his head, laughing, and continued to tap the side of the envelope on
the table nervously. Then, he handed it to me, dropping it quickly the
minute I had my hands on it as if it were radioactive. I opened it
up. Inside was a packet of airline tickets—for both of us.
Destination Boston, leaving on Friday and returning on Tuesday. I looked
at the tickets, then up at him, a questioning look on my face.
“I want you to meet my Mom,” he said.
I waited for him to continue.
“You’ll probably have to take some time off or call in sick for a day.”
“Of course, I’ll take the time off.” I waited again for him to continue.
“Mom suspected something when I spent so much time on the phone when I was back
there. She started to get curious and began to ask a lot of
questions. I had to admit to her that I’ve met the love of my life.
That was how I phrased it: the love of my life.” Jake smiled
sweetly at me. “I told her I am unbelievably happy. She wants to meet
this love of my life. She senses how serious this relationship is. She
has been pestering me since about meeting my love. I want to introduce her
to you.” He looked at me with a look of determination.
“But she doesn’t know who ‘the love of your life’ is, does she?”
Jake looked down at his hands and rubbed them back and forth on the top of his
pant legs. “No.”
“Does she know it is me coming?”
“No.” More rubbing on the pants leg.
“So this is the great coming out at home?”
Pause. “Yes.”
“Mmm.”
“Look, Rob, you haven’t told your dad, either.”
“Sawyer, angel, I’ve barely spoken to him since the divorce, which he and my
mom opposed vociferously and religiously and every which way. They
abandoned me. They don’t deserve anything. They opposed the divorce
because of what they assumed the Bible told them, and they weren’t too happy
when I married a pregnant woman. Then after Mom died, my dad said I had
broken her heart. Can you imagine how much guilt dad would try to foist on me
if he found out about this relationship? I’ll let him find out on his own
and react when he reacts.”
We sat in silence for a few minutes.
“I can turn in one ticket and get a refund,” Jake offered.
“That’s okay. You just took me by surprise. I over-reacted.”
I leaned across the table and kissed him for reassurance. Then, I
grinned. “I suppose I’m as nervous about coming out officially as you
are.”
He grinned back. “I’m terrified. I’m 34 years old. I’ve been
away from home since college, but I’m terrified of my mother.” I formed
this image of an overbearing ogre of a mother in my mind, despite the fact that
she sounded nice on the phone when she had called and asked for him. Oh
well, a trip to Boston was the least I could do for Jake.
We boarded the plane at 8 am on Friday, changed planes in Detroit, the ugliest
airport in the world, by the way, and boarded the plane to Boston. I
pulled a blanket down from the overhead bin and laid it over our laps so I
could hold Jake’s hand—at least until the final approach to Boston.
“Are you worried?” I asked. “You’ve been pulling at the edge of the
blanket like you wanted to shred it into small pieces.”
“Scared shitless.” He looked over at me for moral assurance. I squeezed
his hand harder. “My family is old New England. They were
abolitionists before the Civil War. But accepting us is going to strike a
lot closer to home. I just don’t know how my mother will react.”
“Don’t worry about it. Everything will be just fine,” I said. Jake
raised his eyebrows and looked at me skeptically. I just shrugged.
“Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, this is the captain speaking,” the
squawk box came to life. “We’ve been put into a holding pattern because
there are some thunderstorms going through the area. Sorry for the
delay.”
“Everything will be just fine,” Jake mimicked my tone perfectly. I laughed and
shrugged again. He grinned back nervously. I squeezed his hand
again.
After half an hour, the captain announced that the plane was ready for its
final approach. I felt both relieved and apprehensive shortly thereafter
as the tires screeched on the runway and we moved up to the gate.
We were one of the first passengers off the plane. We walked up the ramp
toward the crowd of greeters. Standing directly in front of us was the
spitting image of Jake, though female and, of course, older—the same soft curls
of light auburn hair, but longer and down to her shoulders and tinged with
gray, the same hazel eyes, the same fine facial features, and best of all the
same smile.
Jake ran ahead to his mother and hugged her warmly, leaving me with the
remaining debarking passengers. I lingered uncertainly in the
background. His mother kept searching the passengers surrounding Jake,
looking for his companion, looking past me as she scanned the crowd. Jake
turned around, grabbed my hand and pulled me to his mother.
“Mom, this is Rob.”
“Pleased to meet you, Rob.” She looked me in the eyes politely, assuming,
I suppose, that I was an acquaintance from the plane, and began to scan the
crowd again.
“Mom, Rob is, um, the love of my life.”
Way to be direct, Sawyer! I thought to myself.
His mother looked at me, then looked at Jake, then looked back at me, then had
a totally inscrutable look on her face for a full 20 seconds, her lips making
the strangest movements. I became scared that this trip was all a
mistake. I was expecting an embarrassing outburst of anger and shouting and was
figuring on how I was going to get the next plane back to Seattle. I
looked around to see where the airplane we had just gotten off of was going next.
Just in case.
Then there was an outburst. Jake’s mother burst out laughing, her warm,
rich laugh and the way she threw her head straight back so much like her
son’s. Jake and I looked totally perplexed, which caused her to laugh
even more. She started to say something, but her giggling was too
much for her to speak any coherent words.
Eventually, she got herself under control, sort of, and put her arms around me
and pulled me to her warmly. “I’m sorry. I was ready for just about
anything from the Left Coast—a black woman or a Vietnamese, or a Chinook
Indian. The last thing I expected was a white male.” She began
laughing again as she pulled away and looked me in the eye. “Jake
announced he was bringing the ‘mysterious’ love of his life to meet me.
It didn’t occur to me that it was going to be his roommate—his incredibly
handsome roommate, now that I see you.” She took hold of both my hands in
hers and kissed me on the cheeks. “Welcome to Boston. I’m happy to
finally meet you.” I fell instantly in love with Jake’s mother as I had
with her son 14 years prior.
“Thank you for having us, Mrs. Cantwell.”
“Call me Sarah.” And she burst into that most warm wonderful laugh
again. The laughter was infectious and Jake and I joined in.
Jake’s mother handed her purse to Jake and put her arms around his and my
waists and led us to the baggage claim area, but she was unable to fully
control her giggles. I was glad Jake had to carry the purse. After
our bags arrived, we loaded them in her station wagon and drove off to
Newton. Actually Jake drove. Because it was in Boston and because
he was a native there, I noticed he turned into another crazy-mad Boston
driver. I was secretly glad that I had made Sarah sit in the front seat,
just by offering to ride in the back. I don’t think Sarah noticed
anything. On the other hand, I cinched up the seat belt, then cinched it
up again as we moved into traffic. I finally just closed my eyes and kept
them that way until we got to the suburbs—alive I think.
Jake’s house was a typical white painted New England clapboard house with green
shutters on a leafy street—the leaves still showing the last of their autumn
color, many in the gutter alongside the street. We carried our bags
up to the wide porch and let Sarah unlock the door. The interior was
old-fashioned New England--braided rugs and simple hand-made antiques in
beautiful woods—but the kitchen was as modern as could be.
“Would you like anything to eat or a glass of wine or a beer or a drink?” Sarah
asked, as she showed us to the chairs at the kitchen table. “I have one
of Jake’s favorite dishes later for dinner.”
“I’d love a glass of white wine, but only if you have some open,” I said.
Jake said he would do the same.
Sarah opened a fresh bottle of white Burgundy that had been in the refrigerator
chilling—oh well, so much for my attempt at politeness—and poured us all a
glass. She came over to the table and sat opposite Jake and me. She
reached across the table and placed her hand on top of mine and put both our
hands on top of Jake’s. “I’m so happy to meet the mystery woman,
finally.” That started her giggling again, and Jake and I couldn’t help
but be caught up in her mood. I felt a growing bond with the mother of
the person who was becoming the love of my life.
The weekend flew by quickly. We drove—actually I insisted on driving—into
the country and bought some cheese and cider. We went out to dinner at
Locke-Ober. We toured the sights of Boston, Concord, and Cambridge.
We went up to Gloucester and had lobster. We had a grand time.
Over the weekend Sarah managed to get me to tell my life story, sort of grilling
me as if I were Jake’s intended. Whenever we were both alone, she would
ask about Anne, Celly and Alec. She pumped me about my job, my hobbies
and my politics. I never felt threatened, though, or that my privacy was
being invaded. I felt that I wanted to let her know all about my
life. Strangely, it was only she and Jake that were able to open me up so
intensely into my inner feelings.
* * *
On Tuesday morning of the day we were supposed to leave, I had gotten up before
Jake, and after relieving myself, went to the kitchen. Sarah was reading
the New York Times with a cup of coffee on the table in front of her. She
started to get up when I said good morning, but I told her to stay seated and I
could get my own coffee. She pointed me to the cupboard next to the
refrigerator for cups, and I poured myself some coffee.
“There’s cream in the fridge, and there’s sugar if you want.”
“No, thanks, I’ll take it black.”
We sat and read the paper. Sarah got up and poured two orange juices and
set a glass in front of me.
Then there was silence as she started to say something and stopped—start then
stop, the same mannerisms as her son when he had something difficult to
say. My tactic with her was the same as with her son. I just
waited. Eventually, she worked herself up to speak: “I want to
talk, Rob. I’m really glad you got up before Jake. We’ve both got
an interest in that boy upstairs.” She gestured with her head towards
Jake’s bedroom. “I’ve been really worried about Jake these last
years. I don’t know what happened in Vietnam and I don’t know why he
stayed in Asia, but something awful must have occurred. Awful enough to
have him reject everything in his past—including his relationship with his
father. The rejection was so hard on Jake Senior.
“Did you know that Jake only came home to Boston once in all those years?
And that stay was tense. He would call from the Far East once a month and
promise to call more often, but it never happened. We—mostly I—would talk
to him for about 20 minutes. He never said anything about what was
troubling him.” She paused, apparently hoping that I could help her out
on that score.
“I wish I could help you there, but he’s never opened up to me, either, about
Vietnam. And I’ve offered to hear him out.”
“Let me tell you something I think you would like to know,” Sarah
continued. “About a year ago, Jake’s father came home extremely agitated
and insisted on talking to Jake—without me on the extension phone. They
had talked together at most thirty minutes total on phone calls in all of the
previous years. This time they talked for an hour and a half on a single
call. I think they must have sorted out a lot of what was between
them. Jake Senior came away from that call with his eyes all red.
“He sat me down then and told me the doctors said he had at most six months to
live.” Sarah was weeping quietly now, dabbing at her eyes from time to
time with the crumpled napkin in her hand. “He died just two months
later. In his last few days, he told me that he could see no other way to
make sure Jake came home than for his memorial service. He knew, after
their long phone conversation, that Jake had to make sure I was
okay. He told me it was up to me now to keep Jake alive. That was
all he would say about what he and Jake had talked about even when I asked him.
“Strangely enough, I sensed that Jake was relieved when he got back to the
States for his father’s service despite the sorrow of that moment. But I
could see he was deeply troubled. I asked him—no I begged him—to stay
with me for a few months until I could get on my feet. That was a bit of a lie,
but I was desperately worried about him, and I think that was what Jake Senior
would have wanted. Jake agreed, and then he got lucky with his job—and
then he got lucky with you.” She reached across the table and grasped my
hand in both of hers.
I chimed in. “I know this isn’t going to be a relief to you, but let me
tell you what I know and saw. The minute he got off the plane in Seattle
last May, I had this sense of a dark cloud that seemed about ready to
engulf him. It was such a difference from the Jake I’d known 14
years earlier. I chided him about not sending me even a postcard between
Mississippi and now—half in jest and half serious. His response was that
he couldn’t send a postcard from hell.”
Sarah moved her hand to her mouth and gnawed on her knuckles.
“Jake hasn’t opened up to his problem,” I continued. “I’ve hinted at
counseling, but he says that won’t work. I’ve offered my own ears to hear
his problem, but he keeps putting it off.”
Sarah closed her eyes tightly to avoid the tears. “That only confirms
what we suspected. Something extremely traumatic must have happened.”
“However, I hope things are on the mend,” I tried to say reassuringly.
“The dark clouds are still there, but not as pervasive. It’s such a
contrast. When we were in Mississippi he was almost never troubled.
He was joy and spontaneity all the time. Now I see those qualities
sporadically, but, I’m glad to say, gradually more often.” I paused for a
moment. “But these moments occur often enough to make me love him as he
is today rather than only as I remembered him.” What was nagging at me,
though, was that I wasn’t sure how long I could keep going on this sporadic
basis, especially if we had a rocky period in our relationship.
“I think and hope things are on the mend,” Sarah said, “after he went to
Seattle and got together with ‘the love of his life.’” She smiled quietly
to herself. “When he came back to Boston from the West Coast, he was
changed. I also could see glimpses of the boy and young man that I
remembered before he went into the Army. And then he had those long phone
calls with his ‘girlfriend’ in Seattle.” She started to laugh
again. “I’ll never forgive him for letting me believe you were his woman.
“But I do have to confess something to you, Rob. His father and I had
almost lost hope for grandchildren—Jake was 33 and adrift when we admitted it
to ourselves—so I probably wanted the love of his life to be his
girlfriend. I was seeing things that I should have been more perceptive
about—like who those long distance phone calls were to. Forgive me.”
“Nothing to forgive.”
“Thanks, because you’ve totally won me over. I’m not sure how his father
would have taken to your relationship. He was a stern man—in the old New
England school.” She paused for a few moments, ruminating, then nodded
her head. “He would have come around eventually, because he cared so much
for Jake, and you’re a wonderful person for him.”
She took my hands in hers again, and looked at me. Tears started to form
in her eyes. “Promise to take care of him for me. I know he’s 34
now, but he’s still my boy, and he’s still a boy, and he’s troubled.
Don’t leave him.”
I matched her tears with my own. “I promise I will do my best. I
don’t know what demons haunt him, but eventually we’ll get rid of them.”
I said that with more conviction than I felt, however.
We sat quietly for a while in our separate universes, drinking our coffee and
juice, holding hands. We were comfortable with ourselves, as if we had
known each other for decades.
A bit later we heard Jake’s footfalls upstairs as he started to come down to
the kitchen. Sarah let go of my hands, dabbed her eyes and took another
sip of coffee.
Jake padded into the room, barefoot in pajamas. I had never seen him in
pajamas, but they must have been lying in some drawer in his bedroom when he
woke up. I decided he looked better naked, but I didn’t say anything.
“Well, I see you two have been conspiring against me,” Jake said.
“No, I was just asking your mother to pass me the comic section.”
“Ha! You’re a terrible liar. It’s the New York Times.”
I just grinned.
We ate a nice home-made breakfast, packed our bags and headed for a noon plane
West. As we had our final hugs before getting on the plane, Sarah
whispered to me: “Stay in touch, please.”
“I promise I will.”
Thanks to Sharon for editing!
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