Everything he’d accomplished had been erased: his financial empire, the home in Dutchess County … but most devastating of all, he had lost his child. Gretchen, with her gangly almost-woman manner and her intelligent, loving eyes, had been rendered nonexistent. Dead, or worse. In this reality she had simply never been.
For the first time in his long, broken life he fully understood Lear’s lament over Cordelia:
…thoul't come no more,
Never, never, never, never, never.
"What’s that, honey? D’you say something?"
"No," he whispered, pulling the girl to his chest. "I was just thinking out loud."
"Mmmm. Penny for your thoughts."
Precious innocence, he thought; blessed sweet unawareness of the wounds a demented universe can inflict.
"I was thinking how much it means to me to have you here. How much I need to hold you."
His old boarding school outside Richmond, like the Emory campus, remained unchanged. Some aspects of the place seemed slightly askew from his memories of it: The buildings looked smaller; the dining commons was closer to the lake than he recalled. He’d come to expect that sort of minor discontinuity, had long ago decided it was due to faulty recollection rather than to any concrete change in the nature of things. This time, nearly fifty years of fading recollection had passed since he’d last been here. A full adult lifetime, though split in two, and now begun again.
"College treating you all right?" Mrs. Braden asked.
"Not too bad. Just felt like getting away for a couple of days—thought I’d come up and see the old school."
The plump little librarian chuckled maternally. "It hasn’t even been a year since you graduated, Jeff; nostalgia setting in that soon?"
"I guess so." He smiled. "It seems a lot longer."
"Wait until it’s been ten years, or twenty; then you’ll see how distant all this can seem. I wonder if you’ll still want to come back and visit us then."
"I’m sure I will."
"I do hope so. It’s good to know how the boys turn out, how all of you deal with the world out there. And I think you’ll do just fine."
"Thank you, ma’am. I’m working at it."
She glanced at her watch, looked distractedly toward the front door of the library. "Well, I’m supposed to meet a group of next year’s new students at three, give them the twenty-five-cent tour; you be sure and look up Dr. Armbruster before you go, won’t you?"
"I’ll be sure to."
"And next time, come by the house; we’ll have a glass of sherry and reminisce about the old days."
Jeff bade her good bye, made his way through the stacks and out a side exit. He hadn’t intended to talk to any of the faculty or staff, but had known when he’d driven up here that a chance meeting or two would be inevitable. All in all, he thought he’d handled himself pretty well with Mrs. Braden, but he was relieved that the conversation had been brief. He’d grown confident about handling such encounters at Emory now, but here they would be much more difficult to deal with; his memory of the place, the people, was so distant.
He ambled down a path behind the library, into the secluded Virginia woods that surrounded the campus where he’d grown from adolescence to young manhood. Something had drawn him here, something stronger, more compelling than mere nostalgia. Christ, by now he’d had far too much fulfilled nostalgia thrust upon him to seek out any more.
Perhaps it was the fact that this was the last significant living environment of his life that he had not replayed, and that still existed as he remembered it. He’d already been back to his childhood home in Orlando, had twice returned to Emory. And the places he had originally lived after college, where he’d been a young bachelor and later married to Linda, contained no part of him in this life or the one he’d most recently been through. Here, though, he was remembered; he had put his own small stamp of personality upon this school, just as it had, in this existence as well as the others, had its greater effects on him. Maybe he simply needed to touch base here, to confirm his own being and remind himself of a time when reality was stable and nonrepetitive.
Jeff pushed back the overhanging branch of an elm that was drooping over the path, and without warning he saw the bridge that had haunted him with guilt and shame for all this time.
He stood there in shock, staring at the scene that had troubled five decades of his dreams. It was just a little wooden footbridge across a creek, a simple structure not more than ten feet long, but Jeff could barely control the panic that rose in his chest at the sight of it. He’d had no idea this was where the path was leading.
He let go the elm branch, walked slowly toward the diminutive bridge, with its hand-sawn planks and lovingly crafted three-foot guardrail. It had been rebuilt, of course; he’d always assumed that. Still, he’d never come back to this spot again while he was in school, not since that day.
He sat down on the creek bank next to the bridge, ran his hand along the weathered wood. On the other side of the stream a squirrel nibbled on an acorn that it held between its paws, and regarded him with a placid but wary eye.
Jeff hadn’t really been a shy boy, that first year here at school; quiet, and serious about his studies, but by no means timid. He’d made several friends quickly, and joined in the boisterous dormitory horseplay: shaving-cream battles, draping another student’s room with toilet paper, that kind of thing. As far as girls went, he’d had as much, and as little, experience as might be expected at fifteen, in that more innocent year. There’d been one steady girlfriend his last year in junior high, but as yet no one special among the high-school girls who came in from Richmond on weekends for the dances here on campus; that fondly recalled encounter, with a girl named Barbara, would have to wait until he was sixteen.
That first year, though, he fell in love. Thoroughly, mind-numbingly in love with his French teacher, a woman in her mid-twenties named Deirdre Rendell. He wasn’t alone in his obsession; roughly eighty percent of the boys on the all-male campus were in love with the willowy brunette, whose husband taught American History. Each night at dinner, there would be a mad scramble for the six student seats at the Rendells' table in the dining commons; Jeff managed to grab himself a place there two or three nights a week.
He was convinced she felt a special something for him, more than just the bright warmth she displayed to the other boys; he was positive he perceived a special glow, a flame, in her eyes when she spoke to him. Once, in class, she had stood behind his chair and slowly, casually massaged his neck as she led the students in reciting Baudelaire. That had been a moment of high erotic intensity for him, and he’d basked in the envious glares of his classmates. For a while he’d even stopped masturbating over the Playboy centerfolds, had reserved his sexual fantasies for Deirdre, as he thought of her privately, for Deirdre alone.
By the end of November it became obvious that Mrs. Rendell was pregnant. Jeff did his best to ignore what that implied about the health of her relationship with her husband, and focused instead on the fresh beauty that impending motherhood brought to her face.
She took her maternity leave in the winter, and another teacher took over her classes until she was able to return. The baby was born in mid-February. Mrs. Rendell was back at the couple’s table in the dining commons by April, her breasts gorgeously swollen with milk. She kept the infant in a portable bassinet when she didn’t have it in her arms; and her husband doted on her constantly from the seat next to her. Between the two of them, they captured almost every moment of her cherished attention; Jeff could no longer imagine he read secret endearments in the rare smiles she bestowed on him.
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