Paul phoned about twenty years too late, but Marcie decided to see him again anyway.
“Hey, Mars,” he’d said.
“Paul? Paul, is that really you?” He was the only
person who ever called her “Mars”.
“Yep. I heard about Colleen. From Brad.”
“You’re in touch with Brad?”
For once Marcie’s grief was shadowed by surprise.
“Sort of.”
“It was a long time ago. How are you?”
“What do you want, Paul?” The last time Marcie had
seen him they were standing on opposite subway platforms, going in different
directions. He hadn’t noticed her.
“I’m sorry about Colleen, you know. Will you at
least meet for coffee and fill me in?”
Marcie sighed. “She taught me how to peel a
mango.”
“What?”
“Mango. M-a-n-g-o. Fleshy tropical orange fruit.
Juicy. Dripping.”
“Colleen taught everyone how to peel a mango. Just
surprised that’s the first thing you said about her.”
“I guess I
could do coffee,” Marcie said. What difference would it make now that Colleen
was dead?
Tomorrow good? I’ll be downtown around ten if that
works for you,” said Paul.
“Sure. How about the new coffee place on
University in the MaRs building?” She smiled at her witty self.
After they
hung up, Marcie could have kicked herself for agreeing to see him, but a
sudden, raging curiosity had compelled her to say yes. Between dancing to Abba
late at night and playing Candy Crush too many sleepless early mornings, she
had spent a lot of time trying to figure out what she’d actually done with her
life and always got stuck on the What Ifs? Now the What If that
lodged in her brain was What If I told Paul about the last summer?
***
Back in the day when she was waiting for Paul to ask her to marry him and Colleen and Brad were already buying a smart little brick bungalow in the west end, she had ached, ached with envy.
They seemed to have it all together, those two, as they stepped
purposefully—effortlessly! —into a bright, tantalizing shared future. A
five-year plan. A Cuisinart. Lipstick red Toyota Corolla. Mutual funds. And
then, so soon and not quite according to plan, a baby. Sweet Ella. A dazzling
rosebud who could have been the immortal beauty on a Pampers box. They all
adored her.
***
Fish and chips. Gin and tonic. Colleen and
mangoes. She had a constant passion for them, long before anybody discovered
Thai food and routinely ordered satay chicken with mango salad as their
fast-food default. Colleen could have written the Joy of Mangoes and
probably made her fortune. Her mango menu was impressive: mango gazpacho, mango
smoothies, mango-avocado salad, mango-lime chicken with basil from her abundant
herb garden, mango chutney on goat cheese and crackers, mango martinis. When
she stumbled across a boutique selling mango body butter, mango-scented candles
and nail polish called Mango Mischief, she gave these as gifts for any
occasion. Mango Madness the friends called it, that summer they didn’t know
would be the last.
On the hottest day, Colleen had summoned Marcie
and a few other friends and insisted they come over to learn how to properly
peel and slice a mango. As they arrived one-by-one, she solemnly handed out a
recipe card with precise instructions. The demo came later.
1.
Cut off the
stem of the mango.
2.
Hold the fruit
upright, cupping it in the palm of your hand.
3.
With other
hand, use a potato peeler or a paring knife to cut away the peel, following the
curves of the fruit.
4.
Lay the fruit
on its flat end and slice lengthwise, working around the seed in the middle.
Cut the fruit into thin slices as desired.
5. Stand the mango upright to carve away the remaining flesh surrounding the seed.
And then lick your
fingers, Marcie thought, knowing the mess she would end up with. She had
arrived first for Mango Madness. She was stretched out on Colleen’s patio,
trying to tan her legs but not her face, and sipping the mango martini Colleen
had greeted her with. Marcie was wearing those holey plastic sandals that made
her feet look like chunky blocks of neon Swiss cheese. Colleen reclined in a
white wicker lounger Brad had given her for her birthday.
“Why do you wear those ridiculous shoes?” Colleen asked.
“They’re comfortable. But hot.” Marcie slipped them off
and gratefully waggled her toes painted with Mango Mischief. “Who’s coming?”
“Rhonda. Claire. Maybe Justine, that new person who works with me. She
wasn’t sure because she has to take her mom somewhere first. But I hope she
makes it, she’s tons of fun. And soooo funny. Hey, isn’t that the polish I gave
you?”
“Good memory. Like it?”
Colleen leaned over playfully and pretended to lick
Marcie’s toes. “You know how I love mango,” she teased.
Marcie was shocked when she realized she was eagerly
lifting her foot to meet Colleen’s lips. Summer silliness, she told herself.
Heat and martinis. But immediately imagined what might have happened next if Rhonda
and Claire hadn’t arrived just then. Marcie had always thought of Colleen as a
sister. Until then.
Justine came later, just in time to snatch the last mango
and dramatically peel it like she was doing a striptease with a fleshy prop.
They all howled and instantly liked this new pal of Colleen’s. Perky, younger,
with a great sense of humour, plus a terrific body. The mango martinis had
flowed freely—much too freely—and they all got super silly flinging shreds of
peel and flicking streams of juice from their sticky fingers at each other
after Colleen did her serious demo. When the others left, Colleen and Marcie
staggered upstairs. It had seemed so right, so simple. Perfectly uncomplicated.
***
How easy it turned out
to be for Marcie and Colleen to slip away together frequently for overnights
and weekends without Paul and Brad suspecting a thing since they had often
enjoyed girls weekends out of town over the years. They didn’t even think of
their arrangement as having an affair or cheating. Oh no, their love for each
other was other-worldly, pure; the delight of the new physical wrinkle merely
the ultimate expression of their deep and abiding friendship, and totally
separate from their lives with the guys. It didn’t really count as sex sex. They believed this
was true.
***
Marcie was alarmed when
Paul started pushing her away. Suddenly he was always busy on their mid-week
date night, claiming he had to work overtime.
“Again?” she asked the fifth week in a row when he
cancelled at breakfast.
“Can’t help it. The big project’s gone sideways and it’s
all hands on deck to get it back on track.”
“How long is that going to take?”
“Fucked if I know. Do you think I want to be doing this every week? He thumped his coffee mug into the
kitchen sink and started walking away then looked back over his shoulder to
say: “Why don’t you and Colleen do something tonight, grab a bite, go to a
movie?”
“Whatever.” Marie shrugged. She was baffled by his angry
outburst. They rarely raised their voices with each other, but there was
nothing unusual about Paul’s suggestion apart from his unmistakable cold tone.
She called Colleen.
They met at Spring Rolls after work. They asked for the
small booth for two, ordered the usual—mango chicken for Colleen, satay chicken
and mango salad for Marcie—and sipped lychee martinis while they waited for
their food.
“Paul’s acting totally weird.” Marcie told Colleen.
“What’s up with him? Brad told me he noticed something
was definitely strange after he saw him at that office thingy last week. That
Paul seemed to be going out of his way to avoid him. Odd for sure. And he spent
a lot of time talking to Justine. But she’s harmless. Super involved with a hot
new guy. Lives in her building I think. Handy.”
They both laughed. Handy was good, they agreed.
“Maybe we need a
vacay,” said Marcie. “But he’s so busy on this stupid, never-ending shitty
project that I don’t think I can even suggest it. But I am kinda scared. Things
are just different now. How are you and Brad doing?”
“Well, we keep trying but I dunno. It’s tough. I guess
the counselling helped. Sort of. He’s still kinda boring. He is a good dad, though. And
at least we agree we do want another baby.”
“Jesus, you mean you’ve just settled?”
“I love that he’s such a super dad. And I don’t want Ella
to be a lonely only. I just thought there’d be more for me, I guess.”
“Do we need to talk about us?” Marcie asked, her voice
soft and cautious.
“No. No! We’re good. No worries there,” said Colleen.
They’d clasped fingers across the table and, when the food arrived, ate in companionable silence. When they were finished, they agreed they weren’t up for a movie after all, split the bill and hugged each other goodbye.
***
Justine! Marcie’s brain was
whirling. She decided to walk the long way home and then wait up for Paul to
get back and ask him outright about Justine. She had to know, much as she
dreaded the possibility that he would confirm her suspicion. And then what? She
had no idea so went around the block a few more times, trying to breathe more
calmly and tamp down the sour fear climbing her throat. She wished Colleen had
come home with her, that’s how crazy she felt. Adrift, off balance.
When she got home, she dumped her coat on the narrow
bench inside the front hall, kicked off her shoes and sat for a while in the
dark living room watching the shadows from passing car headlights sweep across
the room. It was strangely calming, hypnotic, and she dozed off.
Marcie woke up a couple of hours later and staggered over
to turn on a light. She hadn’t heard Paul come in. She went to hang up her coat
and gasped when she saw the empty hangers in the hall closet. She raced upstairs
and flung open his half of the bedroom closet. Empty. In the bathroom, cleared,
dusty shelves. It was as though he had never been there. Marcie crumpled.
Stupidly, the first thing she’d thought was that he had run off with Justine.
All these years later, what could Paul possibly want? She had never heard from him after the night he disappeared. Neither had Brad or Colleen or Justine or any of their friends. Well, okay, she could guess what Paul’s issue was though, ironically, she and Colleen had ended their arrangement just a few weeks later. Colleen had announced she was pregnant again and she was going to make it work with Brad.
“So, just friends now,
okay?” she’d asked.
“But we’re so good,”
Marcie had said. “Perfect.”
“Yeah, but we can’t
have everything. So I’m settling on being happy with Brad and Ella and whatever
the next one is.”
Marcie hadn’t whined
she had no one left to settle with though she’d felt like it. And, amazingly,
the “just friends” thing had actually worked for them.
At least Ella did not
end up a lonely only, and she relished being a big sister to Jack from the day
he was born the following spring.
And now Paul again.
Marcie had barely slept. Her hands shook when she put on her make-up, but she
was determined to look good this morning. She wanted to erase the wretched
lines around her sad eyes. Somehow look younger and worthy again. Anything to
conquer the numbness that had consumed her since Brad’s call a few months ago
with the unbearable news that Colleen had died instantly when a speeding car
ran a red light near her office and plowed through the lunch-time throng of
pedestrians crossing the street.
Marcie felt daunted as
she flicked frantically through her closet trying to decide what to wear to
meet Paul. She settled on pencil-slim black pants and the coral silk tunic she
usually saved for festive occasions. Not quite mango, but close enough. As she
walked from the subway toward the coffee place she could see Paul already
sitting beside the large picture window, seemingly relaxed and casually
checking his phone. It was startling to see he really hadn’t changed much,
apart from a slight paunch showing beneath his pullover. Well, she could
forgive him that, twenty years on.
Why had he called her?
They’d had a good thing going for a long time.
She’d never told him about Colleen. The real story, that is. He must
have guessed. She thought she’d been so careful and oh so smart, when all she’d
done was drive him away. But she was
never going to admit to it now.
Was it too late for a second chance with Paul? She’d given up on finding perfect after Colleen. Perhaps it was time for Marcie to just settle. He just might be good enough again; after all, they’d once had a very good thing going.
As Marcie reached for
the door, Paul glanced up calmly but couldn’t see her because of the morning
sun reflecting on the glass. She steadied herself with a deep breath and walked
in.
“I’m here, Paul.”
“Mars, I wasn’t sure
you’d come,” Paul stood up and gestured for her to sit down.
“Me, either,” shrugged
Marcie. “But here we are after all.” They half-smiled at one other.
“And why, really, are
we here, Paul?”
“I want to say I’m
sorry about Colleen. And you.”
“Me? It’s a bit too
late for that.” Marcie’s mind was scrambling. Colleen. And
you.
Had he known it all along? She was afraid to ask, suffused with self-pity for
all she’d lost.
Marcie had long ago
abandoned the warped fantasy that her life would’ve been smoother if she and
Paul had stuck together. So she was surprised by a flicker of heat when he
reached across the table and placed his hand on hers.
Jane Finlayson is a former journalist and corporate writer whose short stories and creative nonfiction have appeared in Canadian and U.S. literary journals including: Storgy, The Penmen Review, The Fiddlehead (fiction contest winner 1999; honourable mention, 2007), The Malahat Review, Prairie Fire, Event (creative non-fiction contest winner, 2010), and Room. Jane lives in Toronto, Canada and has completed a collection of linked short stories titled Some Assembly Required.
“Mango Madness was
previously published in The New Quarterly. For information about submitting to The New Quarterly and a few other places to send your short pieces (some
of which pay well!) see here.
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