Breathe. Not quickly. Slowly. Don't panic. Keep your wits about you. Yeah, right.
Twenty minutes after Diane left my office, I finally gave up reading the same paragraph over and over again. The words simply did not register, for the conversation I just had with Diane pushed everything else from my head.
One night. That was it. My life completely screwed up. I always did all the right things. Good grades. Eagle scout. Worked hard. Grew a business. Rotary Club. Country club. Frequent mentions in the business press. Paid my bills. I leaned back in my chair and massaged my forehead with my palms. I am a success in life. Until I am not.
I replayed our conversation over and over, parsing its nuances. Would she keep it a secret? Would she change her mind? For the past five years, from the day she came in as a junior account executive, she was the soul of trustworthiness. So when it came to trusting her, I decided I had no choice. My options were almost nonexistent. I buzzed the receptionist.
"Marian, I'll be out for the next several hours. Personal business." By that, I meant driving around aimlessly. Some people stand in the shower to think. Others fish or play endless hands of solitaire on the computer. I drive. The knob of the gear shift helps somehow.
It was a sunny winter's day, so there was that, and the temperatures were mild. At least on the interstate, life gets simpler. There's only one direction to go. So I shifted, changed lanes automatically, and thought through the very few contingencies, each worse than the one before it. The phone rang. Carla on the caller ID. A flash of panic, the feel of being hunted. Shit, she knows already.
"Hi, hon." There was no rage in her voice. I was relieved. Don't be an idiot. How could she know already? "You're not at the office."
"Oh. Yeah, I needed some alone time in the car."
"Oh. Anything wrong?"
"No. Just thinking through a project. You know me." Well, no. Carla definitely didn't know me at all, at least not now. "So what's up?"
"Well, you left early this morning. I'm just reminding you about the dinner tonight at the club." Oh, God. Not the stupid fundraiser. For some stupid disease. On a Monday, no less.
"I'm glad you reminded me. When do you need me home?"
"Actually, I wanted you to meet me there. Seven o'clock, sharp. I need to help Nell set up. She's in charge. I'll change there."
"Oh, that's fine. What about Jodi?"
"She can pick up something on the way home from practice. Oh. I forgot to mention. She was accepted to Vanderbilt. Just got the e-mail." Finally, something to brighten my day. Our daughter worried her grades weren't good enough, as if only perfection would do.
"That's great!"
"Yeah." There wasn't much conviction.
"You don't sound happy."
"Well, I'm experiencing the empty nester thing a little. Jodi has been busy with school, and you and I haven't spent much time together lately." Less of an accusation, more a statement of fact. I thought over the whirl of the past few months. Christmas had been a blur of client parties, the last-minute flurry of projects, and closing out the year. Real estate had taken up most of her weekends of late. So, no.
"Well, let's do dinner, you and I on Friday. Catch up."
"Nice try, but we have plans with the Holcombs." Jack and Nell. Again. Now it was my time to sound unenthused. "You don't sound thrilled."
"You know how I feel about Jack."
"Well, get over it. Nell's my best friend in the world." Since when?
"I thought Susan was your best friend."
"She's been so weird lately. Always with the drama. I'm taking a break from her."
I returned in time for a working lunch, this time to act the figurehead during the sales meeting in the conference room. The team had been outstanding over the past few years, so there was little for me to do but nod and ask the occasional question. In the darkened room, my attention wandered from the PowerPoint through the glass walls to the corridor outside. There I saw the telltale flow of auburn hair and an intent walk, Diane holding file folders across her chest as if they were a shield. I couldn't help but think of her breasts, and how they had felt when pressed against me.
"Dave." Huh? "Hello...Anybody there?"
"Oh. Sorry, Rick. Didn't get much sleep last night." Probably won't get much tonight either.
"No problem. Anyway, if you look at page 15 on the report..."
I rallied to get through the afternoon. At five, I lowered the blinds on the west side of my office to block out what was left of the pure and fierce winter sunlight. Given that it was a slack time of year, the rest of the office emptied out quickly. Having crossed through the items on my to-do list I, too, could leave the office with a clear conscience. A tap on the door. Or rather a synchronized drum of long fingernails.
Diane again. She slipped in with a bashful smile, closing the door behind her. She flopped in a chair facing my desk. She looked a bit disheveled, her jacket unbuttoned to reveal the white silk blouse beneath.
"You okay? You were out for a while this morning."
"That was quite a bomb you dropped."
Diane breathed in deeply. Her breasts. Her fabulous breasts rose up beneath the blouse.
"Yeah. I just felt that you needed to know as quickly as possible. But I guess Monday morning first thing wasn't my best timing."
"There really isn't a good time for that. So no worries." She nodded, my cue to continue. "So. Tell me more about what's going on with Mark." She looked behind her, satisfying herself that the door was closed.
"I had suspected something for a while. Suddenly, too many reasons to work late. An extra couple of night spent at summer camp to clean up. Hangups on the phone. Plus he had a talking-to in October about being a little too friendly with the counselors. He played it off as if it were nothing."
"How old were they?"
"College aged, but still. After that, he played it cool. But he was way too protective of his phone."
"Yeah. That's a bad sign."
"Stupid. That's what it is. So he's called me five times today. I'm expecting flowers tomorrow, like that will make it all better."