Through the glass, the steel ribbons of the other track gradually stopped rushing by in a shiny blur and started to come into focus as Amtrak 871 slowed for the next station stop. The blurred yellows, oranges, golds and dull grays of the autumn countryside slowly morphed from a vivid abstract into a real-life of almost-barren, gray oaks and ashes desperately clinging to the last leaves that were refusing to die and spiral to the ground in a bitter northeast October wind.
At least he'd had the decency to send her the money for a first-class ticket and a window seat, Melanie thought to herself. Maybe there was still something left between them, after all. Her business Capital One card was maxed out, and they were hounding her. She kept meaning to send out marketing letters and finish her website. But she always seemed to find herself caught up in the demands of just doing the work and meeting deadlines to keep clients happy who always seemed to want everything yesterday, but always hassled her over her ninety-five-dollars-an-hour rate. And that was cheap.
The plan had been for her and Marie to go out on their own together with Double M Communications when the takeover a year ago put them both out of a corporate job after fifteen years of working their way up. Ron had put together a business plan for them, but he wasn't really on board with the idea.
"You're both very good at what you do, Mel," he'd said. "But two thirty-something women who've paid their dues launching their own creative shop and competing against agencies full of Gen Xers willing to do anything at any hour to please the client? Is that what you want at this point in your life?," he'd said. "Good luck with that."
The bastard, she thought. Why did it seem he was always right? Double M was just starting to pick up enough clients to sustain it and then their plan hadn't quite worked out thanks to life. She'd kept the name but now it was becoming such a . . . her temple was pounding as the motion of the train rose from the wheels, and sent vibrations through the emergency exit window into her temple.
Another twenty minutes and they'd be pulling into Johnson City. She sensed more than felt her breathing quicken a little and a wave of anxiety along with the adrenalin rush that got her wired when this happened, start trying to overwhelm her. She glanced at her palm; it was definitely flushed now. At least now she knew what was happening to her and the drugs were starting to work, too. The sense of panic and the feeling that she was going to have a heart attack and die right then and there wasn't happening anymore. Coming out of the crisis and getting into some stability, was the way doctor Thompson had put it last week. If only she knew.
But at least she was starting to feel more like herself. Once in the middle of the night she thought she even felt a bit of libido and suddenly wanted to touch herself and even reached under the covers, but then just laid there in the darkness for a few minutes with her sweaty palm resting on the mound between her spread thighs until she drifted back into light sleep. Sleep. That's what was really elusive.
The last month and a half had been pure hell, and Melanie was sure that the emergency room doctors didn't want to see her anymore than she wanted to be in the ER after nine trips in three and a half weeks. Not to mention all the times her arms had been jabbed for blood samples, two cardiac stress tests and a CAT scan. And feeling so exposed in those flimsy hospital gowns that barely went to her knees and made her feel invaded between her thighs. It was humiliating, being exposed like that . . . down there.
She closed her eyes and concentrated on breathing slowly and deeply from her diaphragm, I think I can, I think can, said the little voice in her head — which still raced all the time — in a steady rhythm. But I don't want to, but I don't want to, she thought.
It had all started suddenly, three days after Ron walked out. Thank God for her best friend Cindy, who'd been there to get her through the crisis, sitting by her side for hours on every trip the emergency room. And thank God for the healthcare insurance the bastard had bought for them both when they got married, or she'd really be up the perverbial creek. And the cat. The big gray-and-white part Persian, part-something-else furball seemed to sense she needed someone and spent hours purring on her lap while she read the latest Clive Cussler on the couch, and gently stroked Boo's chin and back every once in a while. He was full of affection just when she needed it and she reciprocated willingly.
The affectionate bond between her and the animal had been growing over the last few months. At first he'd been timid — he'd been left in a box outside the pet store, the shop owner had said the day last year they'd adopted the cat — so she couldn't blame Boo for being skittish around people and afraid to let himself go. But he was coming around now.
She remembered how Ron had always just sat silently in the armchair across the room, paying neither her nor Boo any heed, and channel surfing or flipping through his growing stack of unread magazines. It pissed her off the way he'd look up at her that certain way of his every once in a while but wouldn't say a fucking word. At least the blaring volume of the commercials cut through the silence in the living room. If you could call it that.
Damn him. He wasn't there when she needed him most. Maybe she should've asked Cindy to call him and at least tell him what was going on. Maybe he would've cared. Maybe he wouldn't have. Well, fuck him. If people didn't want to be part of her life, she could handle that.
And then two days ago, she almost hadn't answered the phone when it rang because she didn't recognize the number on the call display and besides, she was in the midst of getting dressed, with her bra only half on, to make her ten a.m. first weekly counseling appointment to deal with the messed-up-head part of her newly acquired anxiety disorder.
"I know we never really said good-bye and I'm sorry about that. I mean that, Mel. I never meant for us to end that way. I'd just like to see you one more time and then we can both get on with our lives," Ron had said. "Come down for the afternoon. Meet me at Magruder's. I'll bring the papers with me."
"Knock yourself out," she'd responded caustically, and then hung up. Had there been sadness in his voice? She wasn't sure. But she'd agreed to go after he offered to buy her a ticket. And hung up the phone feeling . . . confused. It was the only word she could think of to describe the wave of feelings that swarmed her when she put the receiver back in its cradle. Damn the GAD. I really don't need this, she'd thought. She felt like an idiot when her brain just wouldn't kick into gear properly and she couldn't put two words together but her body did strange and not-so-wonderful things at will. Not great for business when you work with words for a living, Melanie thought.
"You bastard, don't mess with my head," she'd muttered as she pushed her left bubby into the bra cup, snapped the clasp shut and ran her fingers under the straps and couldn't avoid noticing that her nipples were hard and straining against the purple Lycra, and a tingling sensating between her thighs. And the anxious sensation at the same time. And all she'd done was . . . think about him for a millisecond amongst all the scrambled thoughts in her racing head. It was like walking around all the time with IndyCars going around a track in your head.
She glanced at her watch. Twelve-fifteen. The train was running late. The countryscape of mown wheat fields, bogs, farms and half-dead stands of trees morphed into a cityscape as the train made its way past the grain elevators, industrial warehouses and auto supply stores that marked the eastern city limits of Johnson City. An eastbound CSX freight roared past on the opposite track, temporarily obscuring her view, and then the jagged skyline of downtown office towers and hotels filled her vision. The gray blanket of sky had cleared and sunlight glinted off mirrored windows.
"Ladies and gentlemen, our next station stop is Johnson City, in just a couple of minutes," the conductor affirmed over the train's public-address system. "Passengers getting off in Johnson City, please remain seated until the train comes to a complete stop."
A sense of dread — it was just the anxiety attack, she knew, but perhaps there was some melancholy, too — made her shudder for just an instant as the train lurched when it rattled across a switch and swung onto the station track, slowing alongside the platform. Maybe she shouldn't have come. Maybe she shouldn't have dressed the way she had for the occasion. What the hell had she been thinking? Too late now.