Chapter Six
Breakthrough!
It was close to 1:00 in the morning, the same evening. It was late. Everyone was tired, but no one seemed ready to go to bed. Mary, Fletcher and Sorrel were all sitting in the living room. The television was on, but there wasn't much to watch, even with satellite TV. Fletcher had a pretty good home library, but as yet Sorrel knew nothing about it, and Fletcher was more interested in trying to unravel some of the mystery about Sorrel than in showing her his collection.
Mary was the one who broke the ice, "Sorrel, we all know basically what's brought you to your present predicament, but I can't for the life of me fathom exactly what happened. Your guilt or innocence notwithstanding, what led you to want to leave your children? I know it's none of my business, but it would sure help me clean up some impressions I have."
Sorrel, though dreadfully tired was still alert enough to be on guard, "There's really nothing to tell. I had two children. They were babies, and I wasn't a good mother."
Fletcher, tired himself, interjected, "How could you not be a good mother?"
Sorrel answered, "I don't want to talk about it."
Mary was the only person rested enough to think clearly, walked over and sat down beside Sorrel on the love seat, "We don't want to judge you Sorrel. We just want to understand."
Sorrel answered, "Look I just don't want to talk about it. OK?"
Fletcher wasn't going to let it go, "Well what happened? Were you abusive? Did you beat them? Did you like lock them in a closet or something? Did you hit on them?"
Sorrel looked across the room at him, for a second both Mary and Fletcher could see a glimmer of real anger, "No. I never hit either of them. I wouldn't, couldn't do anything like that. Look, like I said. I was just a bad mother. I don't want to talk about it!"
Mary still did, "Were you neglectful?"
Sorrel answered, "No I wasn't neglectful. Now let it go."
Mary kept at it, "Did you love them?"
Sorrel, "Of course I loved them. I still love them." Her voice was rising. "I'll always love them. They're my children." her voice settling again, "I love them. Now leave me alone."
Fletcher pried in a little more, "It doesn't sound right. You loved them. You weren't hurting them, and you didn't neglect them, but you left them."
Sorrel squirmed, "A lot of things don't make sense. Can't we just give it a break?"
Mary put her arm around the woman and pulled her over, "Help us Sorrel. We want to make some sense of this."
Sorrel sat stiffly, hard as stone. She wanted to say something, "No." Her composure was starting to crumble, "I." She was crumbling. She burst into tears. Her whole body just collapsed. She became a quivering listless mass, a helpless, hopeless soluble heap of jelly, "It was a mistake. I was wrong. I thought I knew. I thought I had it figured out."
She couldn't stop crying, "It all turned out wrong. I just wish. I just am so sorry." She just completely fell to pieces right there in front of both of them, "You don't understand. I thought I was right. I had it figured out. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry." That was all she seemed to be able to say.
Mary was hugging her tightly. She took her left hand and brushed her tear stained face. Then she took both of her own hands and used them to cup her face. "You didn't desert your children. You didn't abandon them. Your husband ran away. You needed a plan. You had a plan. You'd let your sister be a temporary caregiver while you got your life together. You'd make something of yourself, and then go back and get them."
She held Sorrel's face in her hands, and wouldn't let go. Sorrel couldn't turn away. She wanted to, but the older woman wouldn't let her.
Mary went on, "You would become a big success; then you'd ride back like a queen on a great white stallion and give them everything you never got. We know all about you Sorrel. We know all about your childhood. You were going to make things different, perfect. Your children were going to be fabulously happy."
"Your sister couldn't have children. She'd be the caregiver while you went to college and started a career. You got the chance through the very company you've been accused of robbing. You won a scholarship, and with you're IQ and your determination you knew you would make it. It just took a lot of hard work; something you'd been accustomed to all your life."
Sorrel, between the sobbing and ululation collapsed to the floor. Her knees on the carpet, she knelt with her head in Mary's lap. Her whole body shook. The grief, the remorse, the brokenhearted anguish, the years of hiding from the truth was flooding out. The room was inundated with forlorn heartsick grief. The woman's hurt and pain was palpable.
Fletcher was exhausted. It was becoming more than he could bear, but he stayed in his seat. He didn't dare get up or move. He couldn't. He watched as he saw Sorrel unravel like a broken toy. What must have been years of suppressed regret and repressed self-loathing was flooding the room in an irresistible deluge.
Mary kept talking, "You went to school. You aced every class. You were first on every test, you're every term paper was better than any other student's. Yours was a perfect 4.00 GPA. You were Magma cum Laude. You had to be. You were top seeded in the company that gave you the scholarship. On the fast track to the top job, positions of leadership, respect, and responsibility were waiting."
Mary enunciated the woman's anguish, "It was all yours, but something, or someone, or two someone's, got left behind. You planned to go back."
Mary kept speaking, pushing with a heartfelt vehemence that was even tearing at Fletcher as he sat across the room, "You wanted to go back. You meant to go back, but what if they didn't know you. What if they didn't remember?"
"Your sister didn't want you back. Your sister didn't want them to remember. You'd worked, studied, crammed, and fought. You'd risen to the pinnacle, and it all turned to just so much sand. It meant nothing. You couldn't go back."
"You couldn't claim the prize, your heart's desire. You were afraid. You were afraid they wouldn't love you. They wouldn't understand. They wouldn't want their mother, their mommy, and then there was the picnic. Then, even the work, the career was gone. All that was left was to protect the children, but protect them from what? You were going to protect your children from their own mother."
Sorrel was hugging Mary's legs. She crumpled to the floor, head down, arms hugging knees in complete utter defeat. She'd stopped crying. Now it was just a steady slow weeping. She mumbled into the floor. "I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. I'm just so sorry."
Fletcher had heard enough. He leaped across the room. In one swift gallant gesture he scooped her from the floor. He crushed her to him. He thought, so this was the terrible secret, the awful monster hidden behind this human working machine.
He grabbed her by her shoulders, "You're not sorry. You can't be sorry. I won't allow it. It's all, all right now. I'm going to fix it. Your children are still young. They'll understand. Even if they don't right away, they'll learn to understand."