“Max?” she said, and I grimaced—I’d forgotten about caller ID.
“Hey,” I said.
“Is everything okay?”
It was ten at night, and we’d left in a major storm. Of course she was panicked.
“There’s something I need to ask you,” I said.
Do you know how you light up a room?
Do you ever think about me?
Then I heard Reid’s voice in the background. “Come on back to bed, honey. Who’s calling so late, anyway?”
And Liddy’s response: “It’s just Max.”
Just Max.
“What did you want to ask?” Liddy said.
I closed my eyes. “Did . . . I leave my scarf there?”
She called out to Reid. “Sugar? Did you see Max’s scarf?” There was some exchange I couldn’t quite make out. “Sorry, Max, we haven’t found it. But we’ll keep a lookout.”
A half hour later, I let myself into my apartment. The light over the stove was still on, and the little tree that Zoe had bought and decorated herself was glowing in the corner of the living room. She absolutely insisted on a live tree, even though it meant lugging it up two flights of stairs. This year she’d tied white satin bows to the boughs. She said each one was a wish she had for next year.
The only difference between a wish and a prayer is that you’re at the mercy of the universe for the first, and you’ve got some help with the second.
Zoe was asleep on the couch, curled beneath a blanket. She was wearing pajamas with snowflakes all over them. She looked like she’d been crying.
I kissed her, to wake her up.I’m sorry,she murmured against my lips.I shouldn’t have—
“I shouldn’t have, either,” I told her.
Still kissing her, I slipped my hands under the edge of her pajama top. Her skin was so hot it burned my palms. She dug her fingers into my hair and wrapped her legs around me. I sank to the floor and tugged her down with me. I knew every scar on her body, every freckle, every curve. They were markers on a road I’d been traveling forever.
I remember thinking our lovemaking that night was so intense, it should have left behind some kind of permanent record, like the beginnings of a baby, except it didn’t.
I remember that my dreams were full of wishes, although, when I woke up, I couldn’t remember a single one.
By the time Liddy gets to wherever she’s planning on going, my buzz has worn off and I’m pretty much pissed at myself and the world. Once Reid finds out that I was pulled over by a cop for drunk driving, he’ll tell Pastor Clive, who’ll tell Wade Preston, who’ll lecture me on how easy it is to lose a trial. When all I wanted, I swear, was to quit being thirsty.
I have been riding with my eyes closed because I’m also suddenly so tired I can barely keep upright. Liddy throws the truck into park. “We’re here,” she says.
We are in the lot in front of the storefront that houses the administrative offices of the Eternal Glory Church.
It’s after hours, and I know that Pastor Clive won’t be around, but that doesn’t make me feel any less guilty. Alcohol has already messed up my own life, and here I am using it to mess up a whole bunch of other people’s lives, too. “Liddy,” I promise, “it won’t happen again . . .”
“Max.” She tosses me the keys to the church office, which she has because she is the head of the Sunday School program. “Shut up.”
Pastor Clive has set up a small chapel here, just in case someone needs to come in to pray at a time other than our weekly service at the school auditorium. It’s got a few rows of chairs, a lectern, and a picture of Jesus on the cross. I follow Liddy past the receptionist’s desk and the copy machine into the chapel. Instead of turning on the lights, she strikes a match and touches it to a candle that’s sitting on the lectern. The shadows make Jesus’s face look like Freddy Krueger’s.
I sit down beside her and wait for her to pray out loud. That’s what we do at Eternal Glory. Pastor Clive carries on a conversation with Jesus and we all listen.
Tonight, though, Liddy folds her hands in her lap, as if she’s waiting formeto speak.
“Aren’t you going to say something?” I ask.