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"I felt sick and weak and disheartened and didn't know it was this il ness. I was afraid I'd been wrong al those lesbian years. I was sick in spirit. Then I realized that you were so much of my spirit I was even more sick without you."
She nodded in response. "It was my fault, Ginger."
Neither of them could say more. They went back to watching television, an old Wil iam Bendix movie neither had seen before.
Mr. and Mrs. Quinn drove up one Sat.u.r.day-the two brothers and their wives, the stay-at-home brother, and Ginger's parents-with the five nieces and nephews, al somehow stuffed into Joseph's old Suburban, the whole big Irish family. Ginger ral ied and instructed Jefferson in roasting chickens and mas.h.i.+ng potatoes. The frozen vegetables went into the microwave, and dessert was ice cream with fudge and marshmal ow sauces out of jars. It had actual y been fun, but Ginger got too tired. After that, Jefferson couldn't imagine Ginger dancing again and knew Ginger wouldn't want to live without dance.
The third Friday of August, they went outside after Ginger's afternoon nap. The pines shaded them while the sun scattered silver sequins atop the wind-chopped lake waters. She led Ginger to the bench and stood behind her, hands on her shoulders. Ginger was getting a gray streak off to one side of her hair. When Jefferson commented on this, Ginger raised one hand, slowly, and laid it on Jefferson's. It was four o'clock. They were in the long, sad decline of the day. Afterward, Jefferson wondered if Ginger had been practicing saying good-bye with that brief, cat's paw of a touch. When Ginger moved her hand away she asked Jefferson for a little water. Jefferson had learned to keep a six-pack cooler iced on the porch and stepped inside the screen door to get a bottle.
She moved around the bench to place the straw at Ginger's mouth. A red bubble was growing between Ginger's lips.
"Ginger?"
Ginger was staring toward the lake.
"Ginger," she insisted. "Oh, G.o.d."
Ginger gave a gurgling sort of cough and blood leapt from her mouth, down her chin, onto her lap.
Quickly, without thinking, Jefferson grabbed Ginger under the arms and laid her on the gra.s.s, turning her head sideways to keep her from choking on the blood. She touched Ginger's cheek and asked, "Ginger, are you stil with me?" There was no response. Her other hand had already pul ed out her cel phone and, despite al her practice out of Ginger's sight, she fumbled and dialed 999, then 411, and final y 911 and heard herself yel for a.s.sistance at her address.
"Hold, please. Stay on the line."
The pause seemed so long she was about to hang up and cal back.
"Is that the Jeffersons' place?" the operator asked when she returned.
"You know it?"
The operator gave instructions to the ambulance, then answered, "I've been to parties there."
Oh, great, she thought. Who knows what went on. "Can you get me some help? We're around back."
"What's happening?" the woman asked.
"Ginger-she's recovering from surgery for an aneurysm. She vomited blood. Her abdomen is real y swol en. I think she's going."
"Pa.s.sed on?"
Without me, she realized. She's sending me away and bowing out without me. Jefferson knew she deserved nothing better, but hadn't she made up for some of the grief she'd caused Ginger? Ginger had left her again. She was gone for good.
She stopped herself. This was not about her. Ginger was dying here, or was she real y already- Her voice was dry, rasping. "She's bluish and cool to the touch."
The operator wanted to know if Ginger was breathing. "But don't do CPR."
She couldn't, with the blood continuing to run out of Ginger's poor soft mouth. "I can't find her pulse."
"Do you have a blanket? She'l be in shock."
It was so hard to look into Ginger's eyes and think she probably saw nothing now. "A lap throw. I've got her lying on it on the ground. Wait, I'm lifting her legs up to the bench. She's so cold and clammy."
"The medics are on their way, hon."
She felt as alone as she'd ever felt. "Ginger? You're the love of my life. You fil my world. You-" Why hadn't she found these things before? "You'l always be with me," she whispered. "It's okay to go now. What if you couldn't dance?" So fast she almost didn't know she'd thought it, she considered al the time and energy Ginger would have to give her if she couldn't dance, but said, "I'l love you wherever you are."
She caught sight of the mail boat on its way into the harbor. Ginger's eyes stared toward it. They'd always talked about taking a ride on the bigger mail boat over on Winnipesaukee, but never had, and here was the little Sat.u.r.day Lake mail boat, a reminder of everyday life going on and on without Ginger, without time to be together the way they could have been and no one on the boat aware that Jefferson's world was shredding.
A siren wailed, coming along the curve of the lake.
"Any sign of life?" the operator was asking.
"No!" she yel ed toward the phone, which lay on the pine needles next to Ginger. "Sorry, Ginger. I have to see what's going on inside your mouth again." It sounded sil y as she said it, as she heard a vehicle approach. It was that she wanted, wanted, wanted her girl. She mopped more blood out and set her lips to Ginger's, tasting her dear lips tinged with metal ic blood, thinking that this was the last kiss, their death kiss.
Two medics rushed to Ginger. "Is there someone who can be with you?" one of them asked, after confirming that Ginger was gone.
She only wanted to be with Ginger. "No."
She lingered over this task, crying as she worked, cleaning Ginger up as best she could after the medics had taken her inside and laid her on the red- and-black checkered bedspread. They told Jefferson to cal Webbers.
This was going too fast, she thought. "Can't I keep her tonight?" But she knew that was senseless. In the silent vacuum of the emergency vehicle's departure, nothing was left but Ginger's paisley flip-flops, splayed on the ground where they had fal en.
What would be good about now would be a drink, but she'd lost her taste for drinking altogether. Her drinking had kil ed Ginger, hadn't it? She wondered if Ginger had found out who she real y was: a creature of Jefferson's definition or some new b.u.t.terfly never before captured and too fragile to survive.
Jefferson cal ed Joseph. He would go over and tel the rest of the Quinns. She set out Ginger's new dance outfit, the black leotard and sparkly blue gossamer wrap, before she cal ed Webbers. She and Ginger had picked it up on one of their trips to the city, an unspoken understanding between them of its purpose.
That night she cal ed Lily Ann and asked her to tel their friends. She had the wild thought of cal ing Angela, back in Dutchess, but didn't, of course.
She didn't want to tel Emmy and Jarvy. Not tonight. What she wanted was to tel Ginger. To have Ginger say, "There, there, there," and hold her, rock her, make love with her until sleep melded them together with the contentment only warm, sated bodies and glad hearts can know. Wasn't that al she'd ever wanted?
Chapter Thirty.
Jefferson wouldn't let her friends help her finish her move north.
"Wait til I get settled in and then come to visit," she insisted.
She drove up on a Monday. Wet fal en leaves, gold and brown, green and red, lay everywhere on the parkways. Ginger's belongings were stil in the guest room at the apartment. A smal moving truck was bringing what she would need. She preferred the simple camp furniture at the lake to most of the pieces she and Ginger had col ected, but her computer, iPod docking station, clothing, photos, sports gear, and books, her bicycle-she could not live without them. Whew, she kept saying to herself as she little by little decided what she'd need and what she could let go. She'd wondered if dying was something like this, letting it al go, offloading the heavy acc.u.mulations of the years and drifting away.
Retiring at forty-eight was the craziest thing she'd ever done sober, but she knew she was right to get out of Dodge. Ever since she'd stopped drinking and started on the depression medication, the same old same old wasn't doing it for her. She'd probably partly bored Ginger into leaving. No more impulsive excursions out to the bars, no more disappearing al night, no more skulking around the apartment hungover and cranky.
Before Ginger left with Mitchel , their lives had become serene and routine. They had gone to Cafe Femmes together, but with only a bottle of sparkling water in her hands, she'd felt left out. Al those d.y.k.es downing alcohol, content to yel at one another over the music, to dance dirty in front of the whole world-had she lived like that? As the women got more and more drunk, they seemed to become different people: the loud ones got louder, the quiet ones more withdrawn. And young! Had she and her friends ever looked this young? There was something ugly about the sight of these children playing at adult activities. Ugliest of al was the sight of a young lesbian blitzed out of her mind. She'd thought of herself as suave, urbane; au contraire, she realized, she'd been a bleary-eyed, stumbling drunk, slack-smiled, and, like these tipsy butches, boring beyond belief. Some nights when they bestirred themselves to go downtown and see their friends, she started to yawn before she left the house. More and more often she and Ginger veered into the video store on the way to the subway and returned home with a chick flick, made popcorn, and fel asleep thirty minutes before the end of the movie. Was she stil Jefferson without Irish whiskey?
That first official night after she moved into the cottage, she made a fire. Grandfather Jefferson had built the fireplace with the help of a local stonemason, using smal slabs of granite, a couple with embedded smoky quartz, garnet, and crystal gathered from nearby fields when the cottage was built back in the 1930s, others brought from her grandparents' Dutchess land. When people started building around them, the accessible rocks had mostly been used, so Grandfather had put up a four-rail fence with bracing, low enough for the deer and moose to get in and out, open enough for the bunnies and other little guys to pa.s.s under.
The great-room wal s were the original tongue-and-groove wood paneling, stained and shel acked to a s.h.i.+ne, and the floors were made of wide wood planks with big, old-fas.h.i.+oned blue braided rugs. When they replaced the outhouse with a bathroom, they made it large enough for a toilet and shower.
Original y they used the antiquated, red hand pump out front. An enamel sink hung on the wal outside the bathroom, supported by metal poles and skirted with old oilcloth-enclosed storage.
Only the kitchen had been updated. The pine open shelving and single wooden counter, patches worn in its varnish from use, hadn't changed, but in the 1950s, the icebox had been moved out back to store tools and garden implements. Her grandparents had put in a stark white Frigidaire Kelvinator, which whined now. The repair guy from Mailboat Harbor, though long retired, stil came out to work on it and the Tappan range they'd bought at the same time. Only the clock at the top of the stove was not working. It stuck with a click every time it pa.s.sed 3:18. She'd see if she could get that fixed and find someone to blow insulation into the wal s.
There were two bedrooms off the great room, with knotty-pine three-quarter wal s and, over them, an open loft where she'd slept as a kid. The climb up the vertical wooden ladder to the mattress under the attic window had been a highlight of her childhood. From the foot of her bed she could see the rafters over the living room and glimpse the grown-ups talking, smoking, and drinking on the deep screened front porch, its floor painted blue. Now the big bedroom downstairs was hers. The red-and-black checked bedspread and matching curtains at the screened windows must be at least as old as she was. There were no doors on the closets in the house, just rods and blue muslin shower curtains. The cottage, dotted with floor lamps, had always felt more like home than her parents' big, dark, ungainly house in Dutchess.
Her things weren't due until the next day, so she had little to keep her busy. She'd brought their blue-and-purple-striped comforter and wrapped it around herself on the old overstuffed couch. How many times had they made love on this very couch when they were first together? How many times sat touching shoulders, hips, feet, with their legs resting on the cherrywood-slab coffee table, watching logs burn in the fireplace? The mantel was made from a piece of the same cherry. They'd talked about work, their friends, their plans, growing old together, foolish bits from the local papers, their favorite TV shows, the old framed nature watercolors hung on the wal s. It seemed they could talk about anything for hours, for days, for whole vacations. The more history they had together, the more there was to talk about. The silence got to her now, but she couldn't bear to cover up the quiet with music or TV. It was their silence, the vacuum in her life Ginger had fil ed, that she hung on to. Al she had left was the very present absence of Ginger, which at least affirmed that there had been a Ginger, had been love, and she hugged the shadow of who they had been as tight as she could.
After a week of unpacking and setting up, Jefferson thought it would be good to be face-to-face with people someplace other than the grocery, hardware store, and post office. There was a bean supper at the Methodist church in Gramble, twenty minutes north and east along the lake. She'd always wanted to go to that bean supper as a kid, but that would have interrupted her parents' established c.o.c.ktail hour, and the church didn't serve liquor.
Ginger, brought up Catholic and turned off by the priests' child abuse, had made a face and exclaimed, "A church?" Now Jefferson was a free agent, like it or not, and no one could stop her.
Truth be told, aside from feeling like a length of herself had been severed, she kind of liked kicking around trying to figure out her own agenda with n.o.body else's itinerary or baggage tripping her up. Life, pain and al , had become an adventure again, and she, the real sober McCoy, was the greatest source of surprises.
Once past the gray stone doorway, she could see the long tables waiting for the crowd. They were covered with sheets of colorless butcher paper, not the brown of the crab shacks in Maryland where she'd taken Ginger one wonderful long weekend. They'd traveled to Was.h.i.+ngton, DC, on Amtrak, then rented a car to get around. The dinner had been fun, but the strongest image she had of that weekend was of Ginger's long, muscled dancer's legs in the air while Jefferson made love to her. The memory was so powerful y erotic she had to force herself to tune back in to this smal -town church where she stood beside the children's leaf tracings, feeling awkward, and looked for an empty seat.
And there they were, a smal knot of lesbians cl.u.s.tered at the end of one of the tables. One more chunk of home fel into place for her.
The first one to spot her, a hefty woman with curly short hair who looked like she might get familiar with a six-pack pretty regularly, glanced away, then did that mumbly thing d.y.k.es do when sharing a spotting on their d.y.k.e radar. The second one, thin, with short bleached hair and a Xena sweats.h.i.+rt, checked Jefferson out and alerted the slight woman across from her, the only femme-or straight girl-in the group. Bangs made her look very young, but the rest of her hair, straight and feathered at her shoulders, was laced with gray. The gray, with her light makeup, made her look both mature and al uring.
She had high arched eyebrows that gave her a questioning look, but beneath them were calm yet merry blue eyes. The woman gave her a quick smile, then looked again, as if realizing Jefferson was gay. The fourth woman never stopped talking.
Of course they would al be at the bean supper, and they al would go together. They were probably locals who had been going to bean suppers since infancy. Or one of them, the femme, she imagined, had been dragging her friends for years. She forced herself to keep eye contact with them and not get shy about this. They were the first gays she'd seen in Pipsborough. She was at least ten years older than the youngest of these women, but they would know others-if there were others. She might not get a chance like this again.
How she had always loved the hushed defiance of being gay, the underground of secrets and shared knowledge that ensured their survival in the face of physical danger and psychic extinction. She didn't know if she could appreciate coming out now, when coming out meant a public declaration, a not-so- shocking rebel ion before an audience of parents, peers, and employers. She thrived on doing lesbian things in the dark of night, of society, of her soul.
The woman with bangs was addressing her. "This is family-style. Come join us. I'm Dawn Northway." Her smile was now wide and open. She wondered who in the group Dawn Northway was. .h.i.tched to. She looked happy. Jefferson pushed her sweats.h.i.+rt hood off her head, picked up a folding metal chair, and inserted it between Dawn and a palsied woman in a flowered fleece cardigan who looked near ninety. The old woman grinned and nodded her permission.
"I haven't missed a bean supper in forty years," the old woman whispered. "I was a server until the shakes got so bad. Harry and me, we helped start them. When Harry died nineteen years ago this month, I stil came to the suppers." She winked. "I knew he'd be here in spirit."
"Are you bragging again, Kathy?" Dawn Northway asked.
Jefferson put a hand on Katherine's arm and exclaimed, "Heaven forbid! Katherine's way too young to have anything to brag about."
Katherine bent forward in her seat to see past Jefferson. "Your friend is right. You get to be my age, you have a right to brag," she told Dawn. Then she whispered to Jefferson, "She's our librarian. Ed Northway brought her mother over after the Vietnam conflict. Word is, he saved her life. There must be a dozen Viets on the Northway farm now. Ed and the Mrs. brought out al the family left living." She lowered her voice. "It was a scandal at first, but I say, what harm have they done? They stay to themselves unless they're doing something civic-minded. Al of the men volunteer with the fire department."
Jefferson waited for more, but Katherine turned to her other neighbor.
"Our lucky day," said the talky d.y.k.e when Jefferson met her eyes. "Usual y we get to sit with Republican retirees."
"Hey, troops," she said, relapsing into her old coaching jargon, "how do you know I'm not?"
Dawn touched her shoulder as she laughed, as if they were already old friends. She kept her hands smooth-looking and nicely manicured. "This is Rayanne," she said. "Don't mind her and her sarcasm, she's harmless. We went to col ege together. Which makes her one of my oldest friends."
Rayanne gave Dawn an annoyed look and told Jefferson, "That's oldest in years, not age."
"That gets her every time," Dawn confided, with a grin at Rayanne.
Jefferson guessed the two had been more than friends at some time. She asked, "What do they do, bring the food to the table?"
"Eventual y," said Rayanne, settling her chin in her hands with a loud, discouraged sigh.
The thin woman craned her neck toward Jefferson and said, "It's worth the wait. Things get a little backed up in the kitchen at first. It's al volunteers."
She reached across the table to give Jefferson's hand a brisk shake. "Shannon Wiley, present and accounted for," the woman said, wincing as she stretched. Back trouble, Jefferson noted.
After an inward chuckle at Shannon's soldier-like formality, she turned to the hefty mumbler. "Jefferson," she offered.
"Yolanda Whale. And I already know my name fits me."
"Hey," she replied, hands up in front of her. "Never crossed my mind."
"Keep it that way," Yolanda advised, "and I'l turn you on to the best ale in the world."
"Sorry, I don't drink any more."
"One of those twelve-steppers?" Yolanda asked. "Nothing worse than a-" Yolanda looked around and whispered, "than a dry d.y.k.e. Except for a slogan-slinging dry d.y.k.e."
"Poor me...poor me...pour me another drink," Jefferson recited.
"Oh, I like that one!"
She saw looks pa.s.s between Shannon, Rayanne, Dawn, and two men at the table.
"I'm Drew Blaine and this is my partner Ryan," one of the men said.
Again, she shook hands. "What a nice surprise." She hadn't realized the two men were part of the group and gay.
"We come to protect our town librarian against Mrs. Green."
"Is she crushed out on someone?"
Dawn Northway laughed. "Fat chance!"
Northway was wearing pink lipstick and light eye makeup. "You don't look like my image of a librarian," Jefferson said, which only made Dawn laugh harder. She'd never seen blue eyes in an otherwise Asian face. She was curious about Dawn.
Ryan explained. "Donna Green thinks Huckleberry Finn should be banned from the library."
"Among other innocent books," Drew added. "The whole Harry Potter series, for example."
She told them, patting one of Dawn's hands, "That's ridiculous. Can't you get rid of her?"
"Tel me how," Dawn pleaded.
"I'l handle her," Shannon said, glowering. Jefferson couldn't help but think Shannon's bleached, surfer-boy haircut would make her butch of the month back at Cafe Femmes, especial y, given her sweats.h.i.+rt, with the fans.