Betsy sighed impatiently. “Duh. Can I go back to sleep now?”
“I’m not doing this well,” Jolene said.
“Just tell them,” Michael said.
Lulu started bouncing on Jolene’s lap. “Tell us what?”
Jolene took a deep breath. “I’m going to Iraq to help—”
“What?” Betsy said, clambering to her feet.
“Huh?” Lulu said.
“Oh, Jolene,” Mila whispered, bringing a hand to her mouth. She sank into the celery-colored, overstuffed chair by the window.
“No way,” Betsy said. “Oh my God, no one has a mom in the war. Will people know?”
“That’s your concern?” Michael asked.
Jolene was losing control of this.
“But you’re a mom,” Betsy cried out. “I need you here. What if you get killed?”
Lulu’s eyes filled up with tears. “What?”
“That won’t happen,” Jolene said, trying to keep her voice even. “I’m a woman. They don’t let women in combat situations. I’ll be flying VIPs around, moving supplies. I’ll be safe.”
“You don’t know that. You can’t know that,” Betsy said. “Tell them you won’t go. Please, Mommy…”
At that, the small Mommy, Jolene felt a tearing in her heart. She wanted to hold Betsy close, reassure her, but what comfort could she offer? This was a time for strength. “I have to go. It’s my job,” Jolene said at last.
“If you go I won’t forgive you,” Betsy said. “I swear I won’t.”
“You don’t mean that,” Jolene said.
“You love the army more than us,” Betsy said.
Beside her, Michael made a sound. Jolene ignored him.
“No, Bets,” she said quietly. “You and Lulu are the air in my lungs. The blood in my veins. Without you, my heart stops. But I have to do this. Lots of working women have to leave their kids sometimes—”
“Ha!” Betsy screamed. “I’m not stupid. Do those moms get shot at on their business trips?”
“You’ll come home, right, Mommy?” Lulu asked, biting her lower lip.
“Of course I will,” Jolene said. “Don’t I always? And in November I’ll be home for two weeks. Maybe we could even go to Disneyland. Would you like that?”
“I hate you,” Betsy said and ran out of the room, slamming the door shut behind her.
Mila got slowly to her feet. She started to walk toward Jolene, then stopped dead, as if she couldn’t make her legs work quite right. “How long will you be gone?” she asked. Her voice wobbled with the effort to appear strong.
“One year,” Michael answered.
Lulu frowned. “How long is a year? Is that like next week?”
Jolene turned to her husband. “Maybe you should talk to Betsy.”
“Me? What the hell am I supposed to say to her?”
That single question brought it all crashing down on Jolene and scared her as much as everything else combined. How would he be a single father? Would his children be able to count on him in a way that Jolene no longer could?
Jolene stood up. She tried to put Lulu down, but the child clung like a barnacle. So she said nothing to Michael or Mila, just walked out of the living room and down the hallway to the guest bedroom, carrying Lulu. It wasn’t ideal, trying to talk to the girls together, but nothing was ideal about this situation.
She knocked on the door.
“Go away,” Betsy yelled.
“I am,” Jolene answered. “That’s why we need to talk now.” She waited a moment, collected herself, and then went into the room, which was papered in a wild 1970s foil paper and decorated with a collection of whitewashed furniture.
Betsy sat on one of the wicker twin beds with her knees drawn up. She looked royally pissed off.
“Can I sit down?” Jolene asked.
Betsy nodded mulishly and scooted sideways. Jolene and Lulu sat down beside her. Jolene wanted to jump into the ice-cold water of the conversation, but she knew Betsy needed to find a way through this, so she waited quietly, stroking Lulu’s hair.
Finally Betsy said, “Moms aren’t supposed to leave their children.”
“No,” Jolene said, feeling the sharp point of those words sink deep into her. “They aren’t. And I’m sorry, baby. I really am.”
“What if you said you wouldn’t go?”
“They’d court-martial me and put me in jail.”