Deirdre doesn't talk to Nicole anymore, but she thinks she does. Last winter, six months went by with neither one of them saying anything. Right around Memorial Day, Deirdre asked if she could borrow Nicole's menu from the deli. Nicole was so surprised that she didn't say anything at first, and Deirdre mistook that for Nicole not hearing her. And she asked again. Nicole wanted to say "I've been fine, how are you?" But instead she just gave Deirdre the menu. And Deirdre mistook that as forgiveness.
Since then it's become a once a week obligation. Almost like clockwork, and generally completed before noon on Monday. Deirdre will ask to borrow something, she'll complain about someone, she'll scramble to come up with something to say to Nicole -- no matter how stupid. Out of the corner of her eye, Nicole sees Deirdre looking at her. Deirdre will shift her shoulders a little, bend her neck back and forth chasing an elusive twinge. Nicole knows that Deirdre is winding up for the weekly pitch, practicing the line in her mind.
When Nicole sees that Deirdre is about to ask her for a tissue or if she saw something on television the night before or if she has the file for a particular project, Nicole picks up the phone. She hits the release button and dials into a black hole. Nicole chats with an imaginary friend in much the same way that she and Deirdre used to talk -- amused, conspiratorial. Nicole keeps the conversation going until she sees that Deirdre is back down to square one.
Lately, though, the imaginary friends in the black hole have been talking back. "You realize," one of them said a couple of days ago, "if Deirdre thinks she only has to talk to you once a week, that makes you a church."
"You flatter me," Nicole said into the silence.
"I didn't say you were God, did I? You're just church. What you should be doing is asking her for ten percent of her income so that you can remodel your wardrobe."
II.
"I'm thinking sometime in February," Oscar said one night at the diner. "Valentine's Day doesn't have to be a problem. If you're in a good relationship, it won't be. But there needs to be a day where we can all just go around and tell each other all the things we've been saving up the rest of the year. And ask questions, too."
"Stuff like, it looks like literally all you do is watch porn and why doesn't it bore you yet?" Sandra reached around her plate for the artificial sweetener packets next to the window.
Oscar nodded and wiped his mouth with his napkin. "Or even just, you are stupid to lease a car when your commute is fifty miles a day and your job is at a fabric store."
"You'd HAVE to make it a federal holiday, though." Sandra ripped two packets and poured them into her glass. "I'd keep a list all year, just for that day. And I bet a lot of other people would, too."
"That's an industry, right there." Oscar said. "Every December, people buy calendars. Every February, they'd buy something to keep track for Honesty Day."
"Notebooks," Sandra smiled to herself as she swirled her straw through her iced tea. "Big, fat notebooks."
III.
Autoreply message from mhawson73: i am having way to much fun to talk to socially challenged geeks on a computer
Autoreply message from vharca: thereisnogravitytheworldsucks
Autoreply message from mhawson73: there's this thing called real life and it ROCKS
Autoreply message from vharca: it's old and its tired and its tired and it's old
Autoreply message from mhawson73: at steve's, call there k
Autoreply message from vharca: I am playing a game that takes up my entire brain.
IV.
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This is the result of a time I genuinely tried to push past fear in order to write a story.
It appeared in the July '07 online issue of Hobart. Thanks, Hobart!
I find this a wonderfully fearless story with a great title. No sooner have I solved one entry--or established a feasible ground situation in my head--than you spin the wheel and I'm with new characters, new dynamics, new attempts to attack or defend a private self.
Congratulations, Erin, this is great work. I enjoyed the humor, and felt moved by the pathos, and thoroughly enjoyed the read. At the risk of sounding morbid, it has always intrigued me that the terminal don't take the opportunity to tell everyone just what they think of them. Perhaps some do, but not to my knowledge? Perhaps the dying get that truth is only worthwhile when told with love. I felt the love and compassion in this piece. Wonderful.
Perfect last line, Erin. Really enjoyed this.
Wow, this stabbed me right in the heart, Erin. Gorgeous work.
Thanks, everybody! I really do appreciate it.