โGran always said that the truth is subjective, which is something I failed to comprehend until my own life experience proved herโ
wisdom. Now I understand. My truth is not the same as yours because we donโt experience life in the same way.
We are all the same in different ways.
This more flexible notion of truth is something I can live withโmore than that, itโs something that gives me great comfort these days.
I am learning to be less literal, less absolute about most things. The world is a better place seen through a prism of colors rather than merely in black and white. In this new world, there is room for versions and variations, for shades of gray.
The version of the truth I told on the stand on my day in court is exactly thatโa version of my experiences and memories on the day that I found Mr. Black dead in his bed. My truth highlights and prioritizes my lens on the world; it focuses on what I see best and obscures what I fail to understandโor what I choose not to examine too closely.
Justice is like truthโit, too, is subjective. So many of those who deserve to be punished never receive their just deserts, and in the meantime, good
people, decent people, are charged with the wrong crimes. Itโs a flawed systemโjusticeโa dirty, messy, imperfect system. But if the good people accept personal responsibility for exacting justice, would we not have a better chance of cleaning the entire world, of holding the liars, the cheaters, the users, and the abusers to account?
I do not share my views on this subject widely. Who would care? After all, Iโm just a maid.
On my day in court, I told those gathered about the day I found Mr. Black dead in his bed. I told it how I saw it, how I lived it, only I cut the story short. Yes, I did check Mr. Blackโs neck for a pulse only to find none. I did call down to Reception asking for help. I did turn to the bedroom door and catch a glimpse of myself in the mirror. Only then did I realize I was not alone in the room. There was in fact a figure standing in the corner. A dark shadow fell across the personโs face, but I could see their hands clearly, and a pillow, clutched close to their heart. This figure reminded me so much of myself, and of Gran. It was as if I was seeing myself reflected twice in the mirror. Thatโs when I fainted.
The story continues after that. Much like an episode ofย Columbo: thereโs always something more that wasnโt seen before.
It wasnโt a man, the figure in the corner.
When I awoke, I found myself on the floor beside the bed. Someone was fanning my face with hotel stationery. After a few deep breaths, my vision sharpened. It was a woman. She was middle-aged, with salt-and-pepper hair held back by the sunglasses propped on her head. Her hair was cut neatly into a bob, styled straight, much like my own. She was wearing a loose- fitting white blouse and dark pants. She was crouched over me, a worried look on her face. I didnโt recognize her face, not at first.
โAre you all right?โ she asked as she stopped her fanning. My first instinct was to reach for the phone again. โPlease,โ she said. โYou donโt need to do that.โ
I brought myself to a seated position, pushing my back against the bedside table. She took two steps backward, giving me space, but she kept her eyes on me.
โIโm terribly sorry,โ I said. โI didnโt realize there was another guest in the room. But I mustโโ
โYou must nothing. Please. Hear me out before you touch the phone.โ
She did not sound angry or even tense. She was merely offering a suggestion.
I did as I was told.
โWould you like a glass of water?โ she asked. โAnd maybe something sweet?โ
I wasnโt ready to stand. I didnโt trust my legs. โYes,โ I said. โThat would be most kind.โ
She nodded once and left the room. I could hear her rummaging around in the sitting room. Then I heard the rush of water from the bathroom tap.
A moment later, she was back in the bedroom, crouching in front of me. She passed me a glass of water, which I took in my shaky hands and drank greedily.
โHere,โ she said once Iโd finished, โI found this in your cleaning cart.โ
It was a chocolate, for turn-down services. Strictly speaking, it was not mine to eat, but this was an extraordinary circumstance and sheโd already opened the wrapper.
โYouโll feel better,โ she said.
She passed me the square of chocolate, put it right into the palm of my hand.
โThank you,โ I replied. I placed the whole square on my tongue. It dissolved instantly, the sugar working its magic.
She waited a moment, then asked, โCan I help you?โ She reached out her hand.
I put my unsteady hand in hers and with her assistance, I was soon standing beside her. The room came into sharper focus. The ground was solid beneath my feet.
We stood there beside the bed, looking at each other for a moment, neither of us daring to look away.
โWe donโt have much time,โ she said. โDo you know who I am?โ
I studied her more closely. She looked vaguely familiar, but she also looked like every other middle-aged female guest who frequented the hotel.
โMy apologies, Iโm afraidโฆโ
And thatโs when it hit me. From the newspapers. From our one brief encounter in the elevator. It was Mrs. Black. Not the second Mrs. Black, Giselle, but the first Mrs. Black, the original wife.
โAh,โ she said as she neatly tucked the chocolate wrapper into her pants pocket. โRecognition dawns.โ
โMrs. Black, Iโm terribly sorry to intrude, but I do believe that your former husbandโฆI believe Mr. Black is dead.โ
She nodded slowly. โMy ex-husband was a cheater and a thief and an abuser and a criminal.โ
I started to put it together then, only then. โMrs. Black,โ I asked. โDid youโฆdid you kill Mr. Black?โ
โI suppose that depends on your point of view,โ she said. โI believe he killed himself, slowly, over time, that he became infected by his own greed, that he robbed his children and me of a normal life, that he modeled corruption and evil in just about every way a man can. My two sons are his clones, and theyโre now drug-addled slobs who flit from party to party, spending their fatherโs money. And my daughter, Victoria, all she wants is to clean up the family business, to run it with some decency, but her own father wants to disown her. He wouldnโt have stopped until Victoria and I were both destitute. And he did this even though sheโs a forty-nine-percent shareholder. Well, sheย wasย a forty-nine-percent shareholder. Sheโll be more than that nowโฆ.โ
She looked at Mr. Black, dead on the bed, then back at me.
โI came only to talk to him, to ask him to give Victoria a chance. But when he let me in, he was drunk, popping pills, slurring his words, muttering about Giselle being a gold-digging bitch, just like me, how weโre both good-for-nothing bimbo wives, the two biggest mistakes of his life. He was obnoxious and a bully. In other words, he was his usual self.โ
She paused.
โHe grabbed me by the wrists. Iโll have bruises.โ
โJust like Giselle,โ I said.
โYes. Just like the new and improved Mrs. Black. I tried to warn her.
Giselle. But she didnโt listen. Too young to know any better.โ โHe beats her too,โ I said.
โNot anymore,โ she replied. โHe would have done worse to me, but he started to heave and pant. He let go of my wrists. Then he stumbled to the bed, kicked off his shoes and lay down, just like that.โ
Her eyes darted to the pillow on the floor, then away. โTell me,โ she said. โDo you ever feel like the world is backward? Like the villains prosper and the good suffer?โ
It was as though she were reading my deepest thoughts. My mind flitted through a short list of those who had taken from me unjustly and had caused me to sufferโCheryl, Wilburโฆand a man Iโd never met, my own father.
โYes,โ I said. โI feel that way all the time.โ
โMe too,โ she replied. โIn my experience, there are times when a good person must do something thatโs not quite right, but itโs still the right thing to do.โ
Yes, she was right.
โWhat if it were different this time?โ she asked. โWhat if we took matters into our own hands and balanced the scales? What if you didnโt see me? What if I just walked out of the hotel and never looked back?โ
โYouโd be recognized, would you not?โ
โIf people actually read the newspapers delivered to their doors, but I doubt they do. Iโm largely invisible. Just another gray-haired, middle-aged woman in loose-fitting clothes and sunglasses walking out the back door of the Regency Grand. Just another nobody.โ
Invisible in plain sight, just like me. โWhat did you touch?โ I asked her. โExcuse me?โ
โWhen you entered the suite, what did you touch?โ
โOhโฆI touched the doorknob and probably the door itself. I think I laid a hand on the bureau by the door. I didnโt sit down. I couldnโt. He was
chasing me around the room, yelling and spitting in my face. He grabbed my wrists, so I donโt think I ever actually touched him. I took that pillow off the bed andโฆThatโs it, I believe.โ
We were both silent for a moment, staring at the pillow on the floor. I thought again of Gran. I didnโt understand her back then, not entirely, but during that moment with Mrs. Black, I suddenly saw it clearlyโhow mercy takes unexpected forms.
I looked up at her, this virtual stranger who was so much like me. โTheyโre not coming,โ she said. โWhoever you called earlier.โ
โNo, they wonโt. They donโt listen well. Not to me. Iโll have to call again.โ
โNow?โ
โNo, not yet.โ
I didnโt know what else to say. My feet turned to stone as they do when Iโm nervous. โYou best be going,โ I eventually said. โPlease donโt let me delay you.โ I offered a slight curtsy.
โAnd what will you do? When Iโm gone?โ
โIโll do what I always do. Iโll clean everything up. Iโll take away my water glass. Iโll wipe down the front doorknob and the bureau. Iโll polish the faucet in the bathroom. Iโll put that pillow on the floor in my laundry hamper. It will be cleaned in the basement and returned to another room in a state of perfection. No one will ever know it was here.โ
โJust like me?โ
โYes,โ I said. โAnd after Iโve returned those few areas of the suite to a state of perfection, Iโll call Reception again and reiterate my urgent request for help.โ
โYou never saw me,โ she said. โAnd you never saw me,โ I replied.
She left then. She simply walked out of the bedroom and out the front door of the suite. I didnโt move until I heard the front door click behind her.
That was the last time I saw Mrs. Black, the first Mrs. Black. Or didnโt see her. So much depends on your point of view.
Once she was gone, I cleaned things up as I said I would. I put the pillow she left behind into the laundry hamper in my trolley. I called down to Reception, for the second time, once I fully regained consciousness, just like I said in court. And at long last, a few minutes later, help arrived.
โ
I sleep well at night now, perhaps better than I ever have before because I lie beside Juan Manuel, my dearest friend in all the world. Heโs a heavy sleeper, just like Gran wasโhe falls asleep before his head hits the pillow. We sleep together under Granโs lone-star quilt because some things are better kept the same, whereas other things are better when they change a little. On the walls around us Iโve taken down Granโs landscape paintings, replacing them with framed photos of Juan Manuel and me.
I listen to his breathing, like rolling wavesโin, out, in. And I count my blessings. There are so many of them itโs daunting. I know my conscience is clean because I make it through fewer and fewer blessings each night before I fall into pleasant dreams. I wake up refreshed and joyful, ready to seize the day.
If all of this has taught me anything, it is this: thereโs a power in me I never knew was there. I always knew there was power in my handsโto clean, to wipe away dirt, to scour and disinfect, to set things right. But now I know thereโs power elsewhereโin my mind. And in my heart too.
Gran was correct after all. About all of it. About everything.
The longer you live, the more you learn. People are a mystery that can never be solved. Life has a way of sorting itself out.
Everything will be okay in the end. If itโs not okay, itโs not the end.