Day 24
On Wednesday morning Caitlyn was alone again. Jon was long gone; it was, after all, nearly nine in the morning, and he had been at work for almost two hours. Caitlyn, for her part, had very little to look forward to; the new semester at Shellview State would not resume for another few weeks. Jon had suggested she look for a short-term job, an idea she wasn't particularly keen on but knew she didn't really have a choice over. They were paying $2,000 a month in rent, expenses, insurance and other bills; that was most of Jon's paycheck. If they wanted to make or save any, it would have to come from Caitlynâa startling thought for a twenty-year-old woman who had never held a steady job before.
Well, I can sleep in a little bit. I won't miss any job openings by closing my eyes for another twenty minutes. Or will I? What if someone's auctioning a job off on eBay? âOkay, maybe not something
that
crazy, but, what if someone's about to apply for my dream job, and if I don't get up right now, I'll miss it?
She was still pondering this potential quandary when a banging noise came from the door. Moments later, there was a buzzing noise as her mystery visitor figured out how to operate the doorbell. Caitlyn sat bolt upright. Whoever might it be, here on January 2nd at nine in the morning?
Caitlyn got out of bed and was about to head for the door when she remembered what she was wearing: specifically, nothing. They had long gotten out of the habit of wearing clothes when they went to bed: they never seemed to be wearing them when they got up. She grabbed the nearest things to handâa pair of Jon's sweatpants and an old sweaterâand was about to answer the buzzing doorbell again when she noticed the used condoms on the nightstand. (
I swear, those are like a permanent decoration. How many have we
gone
through?âand us being married for less than a month!
) She shoveled those into the trash, thinking in passing that, for once, they'd served a good purpose; whoever this person was, leaning on the doorbell like the Devil himself was after them, it would probably suit her to greet them
without
dried come crusting on her legs.
When Caitlyn finally opened the door, it was no one she knew: a woman, maybe her mother's age, with mousy brown hair, a seamed, lined face, careful eyes. Caitlyn thought she'd seen her around the apartment complex, but she couldn't be sure.
"Good morning," said the woman.
"Umm," said Caitlyn. "Good morning."
"I hope I'm not interrupting you," said the woman, with a smile that did not carry into her eyes.
Caitlyn felt a budding kernel of dislike: with as long as it had taken her to answer the door, it ought to be clear that she
had
been interrupted. She said, "No, not at all."
"All right," said the woman.
There was studied silence for a moment. Caitlyn tried not to fidget. Where was Jon when she needed him? He had always been far better at dealing with new people.
"I'm Margaret Clarke," said the woman abruptly, holding out her hand.
She shook it. "Caitlyn De- Caitlyn Stanford."
"Is your boyfriend still here?" said Margaret Clarke.
Caitlyn frowned.
How would she know there's a man here?
"No," she said, "I have no boyfriend. My
husband
is at work."
"Oh," said Margaret Clarke. "Well. I see."
"Is, uh, is there anything I can help you with," Caitlyn said, desperate to find out what this woman wanted. Either that, or get her out of her face.
"Yes, as a matter of fact, I came here to approach you about something," said Margaret Clarke.
Caitlyn kept her face impassive at the odd choice of phrasing. "All right."
"Two days ago," said Margaret Clarke. "My children and I were watching the New Year's ceremony at Times Square. Did you see it? It was marvelous."
"Yes, we saw it," said Caitlyn, with a cold feeling about where this was heading.
"Well," said Mrs. Clarke. "During the festivities, my two boysâthey're only six and nine, it was
very
exciting for them to be allowed to stay up and watch the ceremonyâduring the festivities, my two boys happened to be looking out the window. They were bored, as young boys are wont to be. And, as we live in 547, across the courtyard, we can see this side of the building fairly well."
"I see," Caitlyn said.
"Can you recall what you and your 'husband' were doing at about 11:50 on New Year's Eve?"
Caitlyn fought to keep her voice neutral. "Yes."
"Then you can imagine what I and my boys saw when we looked out our window, Ms. Stanford."
"What you saw," said Caitlyn, "was husband and wife, sharing with each other a gift from God, to express their love for each other and strengthen their marriage."
"What I saw," said Mrs. Clarke, "I saw through open windows."
Caitlyn's mind found a gap in the logic. "The lights were off. I'm surprised you saw anything at all."
"Well," said Mrs. Clarke, bristling. "My sons have exceptional eyesight. At first I thought it was innocentâmy little Robert turned to me and said, 'Mommy, what are those two people doing?' But when I looked myselfâwhy, my heart almost stopped in my chest."
"And what did your little Robert's father have to say?" Caitlyn asked.
Mrs. Clarke's face closed. "His father divorced me just after Robert was born."
I can't imagine why.
It was an unworthy thought, but she could not prevent it. Nor deny it. "And what did you
tell
them, Mrs. Clarke?"
"I told them that they should turn their faces away from those who would sin in the sight of God and man," said Mrs. Clarke.
The only other person I've heard say thatâ'In the sight of God and man'âis Jon. I wonder where they got it.
Caitlyn picked her words carefully. "Well, you'll be pleased to know that it was not a sin, Mrs. Clarke. Jon and I are happily married. We have only been so for a few weeks, which is why we are, perhaps... Eager, at times, to enjoy ourselves. But we made the decision to wait, and have never regretted doing so."
"I see," said Mrs. Clarke, in a voice that suggested she believed nary a word.
"So, tell me," Caitlyn said in a pleasant, conversational tone. "What sin did you see?"
"What I saw," said Mrs. Clarke, "was you, and your 'husband'â" The quotes were even more audible now. "âsharing pleasure, in the sight of God and man."
"Well," said Caitlyn. "I can understand how that might dismay you, and I apologize for alarming your children, but I don't see how that's a sin."
"It is," Mrs. Clarke insisted. "Coupling is a shameful thing that should be done in secrecy, not, not on the couch in front of the window for all the world to see."
Caitlyn tried to keep from gawking, and almost succeeded. "Aâ A shamefulâ"
"God frowns upon you when He sees your wanton lust," Mrs. Clarke declared in sepulchral tones. "It is the way of sin. It is the way of the devil. Your coupling must be chaste, and only for the purposes of procreation."