Monday Mourning читать онлайн
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“They’re moving on with their lives and I’m left with selling real estate and cultivating fucking azaleas.”
Upon completion of my doctorate at Northwestern, Pete joined a Charlotte law firm, and I accepted an appointment at UNCC. I was thrilled to leave Chicago and return to my beloved North Carolina. But the move had its downside."
"By day, I was surrounded by academics. Dedicated. Compassionate. Bright. And as socially sophisticated as the Burpee seed catalog. Katy was an infant. My colleagues were childless and clueless concerning the demands of parenthood.
Each evening, I collected my baby at child care and transitioned to a picture perfect ad for country club living. Manicured lawns. Upmarket cars. Stepford wives with stay-at-home mind-sets. Female conversation focused on tennis, golf, and car pools.
I was despairing of ever developing meaningful female friendships when I spotted Anne at a neighborhood charity tea. Or heard her, to be more precise. Steel magnolia meets the drunken sailor.
I zeroed in.
Anne and I have seen each other’s kids through broken bones and broken hearts. Our families have shared two decades of camping and ski trips, Thanksgiving dinners, christenings, and funerals. Until the collapse of my marriage, the Turnips and the Petersonses hadn’t missed a summer at the ocean. Now Anne and I made the beach trips alone.
“What have you told the kids?”
“Nothing. I haven’t actually moved out of the house. I’m on a leave of absence. Traveling.”
“But—”
“Let’s not talk about me, darlin’.
There is no pursuing an issue with Anne when she closes down.
I summarized the pizza basement case, and told her of my frustration with my pal Claudel.
“You’ll bring him around. You always have before. Get to the good stuff. Are you seeing anyone?”
“Sort of.”
The waiter replaced our salads with entrées. Lasagna for Anne. Veal piccata for me. Anne ordered another wine, then snatched up the grinder and screwed cheese onto her pasta.
“What exactly is the focus of this new personal outreach program?” I tried to keep the cynicism from my voice.
“Fulfillment. Self-esteem. Appreciation.” She smacked the grinder onto the tabletop. “And don’t even suggest it. I’m not signing up for one more puking course.”
We ate in silence for a few moments. When Anne spoke again her tone sounded lighter, but forced, somehow.