In love, Frankie learned to lie. It was one of two new constants in her life: lying and loving Rye throughout that long, lazy summer.
She didnโt tell anyone sheโd been suspended from nursing, and so she had hours when no one expected to hear from her. She lived frugally, on her savings.
Her life alternated between two worldsโone of passion and the other of guilt. Day after day, she promised herself,ย No more. No more pills, no more Rye. He was as much a drug as the others.
She swore each day sheโd tell him to go away and not come back until he was divorced, but when he showed up at her door, wearing a smile just for her, she was lost, and as good as it felt to lose herself in his arms, the pleasure turned cold when he left her bed. Each day she was reminded of her weakness, her dishonesty, her immorality, her obsession. Over and over and over. At night, when she was alone, she agonized that he was in bed with his wife and she imagined the pain this affair would cause the innocent Joey. But as much as she despised herself, she couldnโt deny him. She was like a starving person who was given two hours a day in a bakery, and in those hours, she came fully, gloriously alive, reveled in her appetite.
โStay the night this time,โ she pleaded at last, hating the plaintive edge to her voice. She meant,ย Choose me,ย but she knew he couldnโt do it. He and Melissa were talking to a lawyer; he was looking for his own place, but he
couldnโt do anything to upset his custody of Joey. He loved his daughter with abandon.
โYou know I canโt,โ he said, stroking her bare arm as they lay together in bed.
She couldnโt help looking at the clock. Threeย P.M.ย She felt the incipient spark of panic, the sharp sting of regret. Regret that he was leaving, or that sheโd let him stay?
โI canโt wait for you to meet Joey. Sheโll love you,โ he said.
Frankie let herself be soothed by that. โI hope so. And weโll have children, too, right?โ
โOf course. I want a daughter who looks just like you.โ He smiled. โJoey wants a brother or sister. She says it constantly.โ
โI love you,โ she said, rolling toward him. She traced the scars on his shoulder with her lips. Puckered burns covered his chest, created white patches of skin amid the graying blond hair.
She stretched out against his thin body, pressing into him. โI wish Iโd been the one writing you letters.โ
โMe, too, babe. I care for Missy, but this โฆ you โฆ soon we can stop hiding.โ
His hand moved down her bare skin. Need pulled at her, made her move against him, made her breathing speed up.
She rolled onto her back, gave him full access to her body. His kisses awakened the part of her that belonged only to him.
By summerโs end, Frankie was a knot of nerves; all of the waiting, the hoping, the hiding was tearing her to pieces. She was lying to everyone she knew and she hated it. Sheโd taken off her Saint Christopher medal and hidden it away, afraid it would burn her skin while she slept.
She needed more pills to sleep and more pills to stay awake. Still, she went on with the affair, waiting every day for the moment she could announce the truth to her friends and family and unpack this terrible, oppressive guilt.
She avoided answering the phone; lying to Barb or Ethel was impossible, but neither could she tell them the truth. She returned calls
when she knew theyโd be gone or hung up when one of them answered.
Never had she imagined herself to be the woman that sheโd become; loving Rye had transformed her into a liar.
Every night, alone in her bed, she prayed thatย tomorrowย he would say it was done, they could be together, walk hand in hand in the sunlight, spend the night together.
Each morning, she felt another piece of her soul fall away.
In August, when she got Barbโs excited phone call that she was getting married, Frankieโs first reaction was a searing, toxic jealousy that took all her will to suppress.
Now she was in a Chicago park, on a sweltering hot late summer day, standing in front of a few guests who sat in folding chairs, already drinking champagne. The aisle had been strewn with red rose petals.
Ethel and Frankie, both dressed in brightly colored, geometric print palazzo jumpsuits and white sandals, stood by a wooden arch that had been decorated with flowers and greenery.
Next to them, under the arch, was the groom, in a brown polyester sport coat with matching slacks. His twin boys were his groomsmen. A Baptist minister held on to a Bible.
A portable cassette player with not-great speakers played Jim Croceโs โTime in a Bottleโ as guests took their seats. Ethel swayed to the music, quietly singing along.
At the end of the aisle, Barb waited impatiently; she was dressed in a flowy white jersey halter dress, her hair decorated with flowers. She held on to her motherโs arm.
When the last guest was seated, Barb gave the thumbs-up.
Ethel went to the portable tape deck, changed the music, and turned it up on โHere Comes the Bride.โ
Barb and her mother walked slowly down the aisle, past the smiling collection of friends and family who were here: a few of Barbโs relatives from Georgia, some of her coworkers at Operation PUSH, Jereโs ACLU colleagues, and Ethelโs husband, Noah, and their daughter, Cecily. Barb was smiling so brightly it made Frankieโs whole life look tawdry, sinful.
There,ย she thought,ย thatโs love. The way Barb kissed her mom and helped her into her chair in the front row; the way Jere looked at his bride.
Love. A thing to be shouted from the rooftops, celebrated, not cultivated in secret and clipped into shape in the dark.
โDearly beloved,โ the minister said. The music snapped off.
Barb and Jere held hands, stared at each other. The ministerโs voice went on, saying the words sheโd heard at other weddings and on television and in movies.
Old words.ย Love. Honor. Commitment.
And as much as Frankie wanted to celebrate with her friend, as much as she rejoiced in Barbโs new love and new life, she felt that toxic shame growing in her, pushing kinder emotions aside.
She closed her eyes and imagined herself beneath the arch, with Rye at her side and Joey strewing flowers โฆ
She heard Jere say, โFrom now on, Barbara Sue, I am here for you, standing beside you. To paraphrase Yeats, I love the pilgrim soul in you and love the sorrows of your changing face. Always and forever.โ He placed a ring on her finger.
โBarbara Sue Johnson,โ the minister said, โdo you promise to love, honor, and obey Jeremiah Maine, as long as you both shall live?โ
โI do,โ Barb said, beaming at him as she fit a plain gold band on his finger.
โYou may kiss the bride,โ the minister said.
Jere pulled Barb into his arms. She clung to him, kissed him. When they drew apart, they were both laughing.
The music changed, turned up loudly: โLetโs Get It On.โ
Ethel whooped and hollered. Frankie realized a moment too late that she was crying.
Ethel put an arm around her. โItโll happen for you, too,โ she said.
Frankie wiped the tears from her eyes. โI still think aboutโฆโ It took pure strength to finish. โRye.โ She looked up at Ethel, thought,ย Tell me itโs okay to love him. Release the shame.
โForget him, Frank. Heโs a liar. Youโre too good for him.โ โBut. I love him. I mean โฆ he is my one.โ
Ethel gave her a look so hard and sad Frankie felt its impact in her bones. โNo. Heโsย married,ย Frank. He is a father. I know you. I know how much you cared for Jamie, but you wouldnโt evenย considerย dating a married
man. Youโre a good woman. Honest. Moral to the point of ridiculousness. You couldnโt survive an affair.โ
Each word felt like a nail, driving into her, breaking bones.ย Honest.
Moral. Good.
No,ย she wanted to say.ย That isnโt me anymore.
Frankie made her decision at the reception, while she danced to music she didnโt recognize, holding Ethelโs beautiful daughter in her arms.
No more.
Enough.
She wantedย this.ย A wedding, a family, a baby.
How could she possibly be granted such grace after an affair? God and goodness and grace demanded change for redemption.
Every moment she spent at the reception, Frankie felt like a liar, a cheat. She drank too much and was unsteady on her feet when Barb and Jere drove off for their honeymoon.
โAre you okay?โ Ethel asked, standing beside her, holding her hand, looking at her with love and worry in her eyes.
Frankie couldnโt stand it. Suddenly she didnโt want Ethel to love her, to care about her, to hold her hand. How could Frankie deserve such friendship? She mumbled an excuse, said she was tired, or too drunk, or just plain sad; she couldnโt really remember her words. All she knew was that she needed to leave. Now, before she broke down in front of her friend.
She took a taxi back to the hotel, gathered up her things, and went to the airport, waiting hours for her flight, long enough to sober up, which only made her feel worse.
At home, she sat in her living room, chain-smoking, drinking gin, tapping her foot nervously, waiting for Rye, determined to tell him sheโd had enough. She couldnโt live like this anymore.
When he finally showed up, flowers in hand, she made him stay outside. โI canโt do it anymore,โ she said. โItโs breaking me apart, Rye. Iโm
sorry. I canโt be the other woman anymore. Itโs wrong.โ
She waited for him to answer; when he didnโt, she took a step back, started to close the door.
Slowly, in the new and broken way he moved, he lowered himself to one knee. She could see how much it hurt him to do. โWill you marry me, Frankie?โ
Frankie burst into tears, realizing just then how long sheโd been waiting for this, how intensely she needed it.ย Thisย would right them both, make everything okay, wash her of this sin. โYes,โ she whispered. โYes.โ
He climbed painfully back to his feet; she helped him. โI want us,โ he said in a gruff voice. โYou. Me. A babyโฆโ
โThank God,โ Frankie said, pulling him into the house and back to her bedroom. Her whole body was shaking.
It would be okay. Finally.
He leaned toward her for a kiss. She met him more than halfway.
Autumn on Coronado Island came late this year, and gradually, a turning of the leaves, a need for sweaters at night, an emptying of the beaches. Once again, the restaurants on Orange Avenue were filled with locals instead of tourists. School buses had returned to their routes in the first week of September; to Frankie these were the things that would always mean fall.
On this cool late November day, almost ten months after Ryeโs return from Vietnam, Frankie put on a jacquard-patterned knit dress, parted her long, straight hair down the middle, pulled it back into a ponytail, and then drove to the hospital.
At the director of nursingโs office, she was instructed to wait.
Frankie was ready for this meeting, more than ready. In the two months since Ryeโs proposal, she had started to become herself again. They had talked about wedding rings, and honeymoon plans, and a ceremony on the beach. Kauai for their honeymoon, for another week at the Coco Palms. He was ready to merge into her world, talk to her parents. She couldnโt wait to tell her friends and family. Barb and Ethel. Oh, they would look askance at first, maybe wonder at her morality, but she would never tell them that she and Rye had slept together before his divorce. That shame sheโd bear alone.
โFrankie? Sheโll see you now.โ
Frankie stood up. Holding her purse close, she walked into the office and took a seat when directed.
โHello, Mrs. Stone,โ she said, sitting in the ladylike way sheโd been taught a lifetime ago when the world had been softer, different. Back straight, chin up, legs crossed at the ankles. She knew she looked better than she had the last time sheโd been here. This morning it had taken only one pill to rouse her spirits. In the past month sheโd cut back. โI wanted to thank you for suspending me,โ she said. โI know that sounds odd, but you were right. I was underwater. I might have made a mistake in the OR, and I couldnโt have lived with that.โ
โYouโre one of the best nurses Iโve ever worked with,โ Mrs. Stone said. โBut the last time I called you for work, you sounded impaired.โ
Frankie hoped she didnโt flinch. โJust before my first coffee. Moving a little slow. Thatโs all.โ
โThatโs all?โ
โThatโs all,โ she lied.
โI know about the pain of a miscarriage. And my husband served in Korea. Heโs told me that some โฆ experiences settle in our bodies as well as our minds. Perhaps you need help dealing with some things?โ
โIโm fine. Truly.โ
โEven if oneโs experience isnโt as traumatic as combat, Iโm told wartime can rather upend a man for a time.โ
A man.
โIโm ready to go back to work, maโam,โ Frankie said. โI may soon even have some good news to share that will put your mind at ease.โ
Mrs. Stone studied her for a long moment. โAll right, Frankie. In fact, Karen Ellis called in sick today. Can you finish out her shift?โ
โOf course. I still have scrubs in my locker.โ Frankie stood up. โYou wonโt regret it, maโam.โ
โSee that I donโt.โ
Frankie left the office filled with hope.
This was the first step to recovery. She would be herself again in no time. Marry Rye and wear white. Not some off-the-rack prom dress this time. With Rye, she wanted it all: the gown, the veil, the church, the cake.
A week later, Frankie stared down at a display of wedding rings in the jewelerโs case.
โMay I help you, miss?โ the clerk asked her.
Frankie glanced at her watch. Her shift at the hospital started soon. โNo, thank you. I guess my fiancรฉ has been detained,โ she lied. Next time she came to this store, she would bring Rye with her, see what kind of ring he wanted and show him her favorites. There was nothing wrong or weird with her looking by herself, was there?
Leaving the store, she drove across town to the medical center, which rose tall and white against the morningโs cloudless cerulean sky. Inside, she changed into her teal-blue scrubs, covered her long hair with a cap, and headed to the surgical floor.
She assisted on one surgery after another for hours. At the end of her shift, she checked on her patients, and then headed down to the first floor.
In the lobby, she saw a crowd of men in suits gathered around the desk.
Most were scribbling in open notepads.
Reporters.
Probably some famous local resident had given birth; like Raquel Welch, who had been Raquel Tejada back when sheโd been crowned the Fairest of the Fair at the San Diego County Fair. Or maybe an actor had died.
Frankie headed for the door. As she passed the clot of reporters, she heard someone say, โLieutenant Commander Walsh.โ
Frankie stopped, turned back. Pushing through the reporters, she got to the front of them just as the woman at the desk was saying, โWe respect our patientsโ privacy. You know that. You may not speak to them yet. Iโve called security.โ
โBut it isnโt every day a former prisoner of warโโ
Frankie edged around the reporters, ducked behind the front desk, and sidled up to one of the women seated there. โThe reporters. They want to seeโโ
โSome famous guyโs wife. A prisoner of war. Walsh.โ His wife. โIs she okay?โ
The woman shrugged. โWhere is she?โ โFour-ten B.โ
Frankie went to the elevator and pushed the button impatiently. It wasnโt until she stepped inside that she realized where she was going.
The fourth floor.
Ping!ย The doors opened.
She walked slowly down the hallway, feeling suddenly sick; at the last door, she saw the patientโs name and stopped:ย WALSH, MELISSA.
Frankie pushed the door open just enough to see Melissa Walsh, sitting up in bed, surrounded by balloons and flowers and baskets of candy. A soccer ball balloon saidย ITโS A BOY!
A bassinet was at her bedside; through the clear sides, Frankie could see a baby swaddled in blue.
Frankie backed away quickly, hit something, and turned around.
Rye stood there. โFrankie,โ he said, too softly for his wife to hear. โI meant to โฆ it doesnโt meanโโ
She shoved him out of her way, ran out of the hospital, and got into her car, slammed the door shut. Her hands were shaking so hard she dropped the keys. She opened her purse, took out two Valium, and swallowed them dry, then bent down, tried to find her keys on the floor mat.
Someone banged on her window. She couldnโt look โฆ had to look.
Rye stood there, looking as destroyed as she felt. โIโm sorry,โ he yelled. She started the car, stomped on the gas.
She had no idea what to do, where to go. Sheโd fallen for his lies again.ย Again. Melissa must have gotten pregnant soon after Ryeโs return. With Frankie, heโd used condoms. Always. Never a mistake.
All these months, while heโd been sleeping with Frankie, his wife had been pregnant. When heโd proposed, Melissa had been nearing term. Heโd dropped to a knee, said, โMarry me,โ and Frankie had believed him. Sheโd believed every smile, every touch, every promise. Believed blindly, believed when he said,ย Soon, baby. Soon we will tell everyone weโre together.
Oh my God.
The only person she hated more than Rye was herself.
She needed a drink.
It was all she could think of. She couldnโt go home, to the bungalow where he had clothes in the closet, where heโd dropped to one knee and proposed marriage.
She drove past the bar frequented by the hospital staff and drove to San Diegoโs Gaslamp Quarter and found a parking spot on the street in front of a tavern where she would be anonymous. She went inside, found it already half-full of patrons who looked like regulars.
She slipped up onto a barstool. โGin on the rocks,โ she said. โAnd a pack of Virginia Slims.โ
When the bartender returned with her drink, she barely looked at him.
Her hand was trembling as she reached for the glass.
Itโs a boy!ย crashed through her like a wrecking ball, destroying every fragile block of herself sheโd tried to rebuild.
โI deserve this,โ she said. โHuh?โ the bartender said.
โNothing. Another drink, please.โ
She took the second drink and downed it, then ordered a third. When a good-looking man sat beside her, said, โHey, foxy lady,โ she snagged her purse and headed out again. In the car, she cranked up the music on โI Am Woman.โ
She drove out of the crowded quarter.
She should slow down; she was going too fast.
She sang along with the song, realized she was crying. Ahead was the bridge. She hit the gas, rocketed forward; a stanchion of concrete in front of her, a wall of gray to her right, and then nothing but water. She turned the wheel, just a fraction of an inch.
A man on a bicycle came out of nowhere. She slammed on the brakes, felt the car spiral out of control on the road, saw handlebars in her headlights. She yanked on the wheel, tried to turn the other way.
Too late.