‘Mom?’
‘Mack!’ Her voice is shot through with surprised pleasure.
‘It’s good to hear you,’ I say, closing my eyes because I feel about thirteen again. I can see her settling on to the bench seat in the hallway, a mental throwback to the old landline phone that used to be there. She could sit anywhere she wants to answer calls these days, but she’s never gotten out of the habit of sitting at that hallway table.
‘The line is so clear,’ she says, pleased.
‘I’m not surprised,’ I say. ‘I’m in Boston.’
‘You’re home?’ she says, caught off guard. ‘Already?’
I hear concern slide into her tone at my early return. She knows how much going to Salvation meant to me, and that I wouldn’t be home early unless it was necessary.
‘Is everything okay with the boys?’
‘They’re fine, I’m fine. It just felt like the right time to come home,’ I say. She’s been a rock-solid support to me, gathering me in when I turned up on her porch and broke down not long after the separation happened, choking out my words because I just couldn’t figure out what I’d done so damn wrong. I don’t want to tell her about Robert over the phone, and I wouldn’t know where to start about Cleo. If I’ll ever even tell her. What would I say? Hey, Mom, guess what happened, I had myself some good old vacation sex! How immature does that make me sound? Besides, it doesn’t do justice to what happened in Otter Lodge. Should I tell her I fell in micro-love instead, and so it follows that I now have micro-heartbreak? If I had to find words for how I feel since leaving Salvation, I’d say I feel as if I lost something. Not like when you’ve misplaced your keys or your wallet. More like, say, if the Red Sox disappeared tomorrow, or if I couldn’t hold the familiar lines of my Leica in my hands. They’re foundation stones of who I am. I’d be less of a person without them in my life. So, yeah. I’ll probably never tell my mom about Cleo because I don’t have the right kind of words to convey her importance, or her absence. And here’s the thing – I have something to compare it against because this isn’t my first brush with the end of a love affair. The white-hot panic and brain-numbing shock of separation from Susie is an all-too-recent experience. I’ve had to get used to living without all the best parts of my life, the desolation of not being with my kids all the time, the twisted-knife pain of rejection by my wife, the profound loneliness of this condo and, in a way, the shame.
So, yeah. I know what endings feel like – messy and complicated and terrible. The end of my stay with Cleo wasn’t any of those things. We didn’t hurt each other or break any promises. It just was, until it wasn’t any more, but dammit, I miss her. I miss the simplicity of Otter Lodge, the beauty of Salvation, the pleasure of being with someone who expected nothing from me. Cleo’s company was a spark of pure joy in an otherwise bleak year.
‘Will you come over soon?’ Mom says. ‘I’d love to see you. Or I can come to you, see the boys?’
I’d love her to visit but not here in this condo. She always stayed in the yellow spare room at home, but that hasn’t happened since everything blew up. I hate that her relationship with the kids has had to take a hit because mine has, she shouldn’t have to be collateral damage. Better that I go see her for now. Besides, I think the next few days might be a bumpy ride between me and Susie; better that my mom isn’t in the mix.
‘Let me just get settled down here and I’ll head up. The boys get back from the lake tomorrow, I’ll tell them to FaceTime you and fill you in, okay?’
She pauses and I know she knows I’m not okay. ‘Sure, son,’ she says. ‘I can’t wait to see your photos. Your grandma is excited too.’
‘How’s she doing?’
‘Oh, about the same,’ Mom says, that careful bland tone she always uses about Grandma. It’s tough for my mother watching dementia begin to scramble her mother’s precious memories. It’s not too bad yet a lot of the time, but I know it takes its toll on the both of them. Grandma’s going to love seeing my photographs of the island, they might even spark insights and recollections that will mean so much more to me now I’ve spent time there myself. If you looked at images of Boston eighty years back it would be unrecognizable as the place it is today, but I doubt Salvation has changed very much at all. ‘I’ll come soon,’ I say. ‘I promise.’