Douglas Kennedy - Five Days
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- Название:Five Days
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Five Days: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Don’t you dare call him. He told you it’s over. Why look for further desperate grief when you know there’s no hope here.
But another, seemingly logical, part of my psyche insisted that I make the call.
I hit Richard’s number, and sat down again on the bed, my free hand reaching for one of the metal slats in the headboard: a way of steadying me, of keeping me somehow grounded.
The phone rang and rang and rang. Oh God, he’s turned it off. To ensure there’s no contact, no conversation, no chance of any reconsideration of his decision to flee. Please, please, please, give me a chance to—
Click. He came on the line.
‘My love. ’ I said.
I could hear traffic noises in the background. And little else.
‘My love, my love? Richard? You there?’
Finally:
‘Yeah, I’m here.’
The voice was flat, denuded. There was a slight echo when he spoke. Coupled with all the ambient highway sounds it was clear he had me on speaker phone in his car.
‘I love you,’ I said. ‘I so love you and I know how huge this all is, how having to end a marriage — even a hugely unhappy one — is such a vast—’
‘Please, Laura. Stop.’
His tone chilled me. It was so emotionless, so vacant, with such a discernible sadness behind the void.
‘If you just turn back and meet me somewhere, I know we could—’
He cut me off.
‘I can’t.’
‘But you know that what we have is—’
‘I know that. And I still can’t. ’
‘But my love, after everything we said to each other. ’
‘Yes, I remember everything we said.’
‘Was it all one big lie on your part?’
I could hear what I thought was a sob, and one choked back quickly.
‘Hardly,’ he finally said.
‘Then you know that this, us. ’
‘Us,’ he said, his voice so quiet, so toneless.
‘Us. As we said, the most important pronoun. ’
Silence.
‘Richard, please. ’
Silence. I said:
‘Certainty. You talked about certainty.’
‘I know.’
‘Surely then you also know—’
‘That I just can’t. ’
‘But why, why, when you know how this sort of love only happens once, maybe twice?’
‘I know all that. I know everything. But. ’
Silence.
‘Richard?’
‘I’ve got to go.’
‘Do you love me?’
‘You know the answer to that.’
‘Then please, please, turn around and come back here. We can—’
‘We can’t. Because I can’t. That’s all I can say.’
Silence. I could hear another choked sob. Then:
‘Goodbye.’
And the line went dead.
I immediately hit ‘redial’. And got a generic recorded voice:
‘The person on the other line is not answering the phone right now. Please try back at a later time.’
I tried back one minute later, then five minutes later, then every five minutes after that until it was almost six p.m., and sunlight had been supplanted by the darkest night imaginable. During that hour when I relentlessly kept ringing him back — and kept getting that generic message (had he done something to turn off his voicemail, so I couldn’t leave him a plea to reconsider?) — I kept running through our conversation, kept hearing the sob that choked his voice, kept trying to fathom why, when he all but declared his love for me, he had to keep saying: ‘I can’t.’
But the answer to that question was already there. He couldn’t start a new life with me because he just couldn’t.
I can’t.
There it was, in all its plain, unadorned truth.
I can’t.
As that distressing hour drew to a close — and I finally stopped pacing the floor, and bursting into tears, and telling myself repeatedly that if he’d just turn his phone back on we could solve this (solve — as if this was a problem with a simple solution) — those two words kept tolling in my head like a funeral dirge.
I can’t.
I so wanted answers, so wanted to know how he could, in just a few short hours, go from proclaiming I was the love of his life to ‘I can’t.’ But why look for answers when there is such a painfully evident one in front of you?
I can’t.
No explanations, no entreaties for understanding, not even an attempt to offer me the slightest possibility of hope, a sliver of light behind this wall of resistance.
I can’t.
The door had been slammed shut. Conclusively. Permanently. Try as I could to negotiate with this, the truth was non-negotiable.
I can’t.
My head was reeling. So this is what it must have felt like when that truck slammed into Eric and he was sent into free-fall. The trauma of losing all control of your immediate destiny; of having everything you believed was solid, true, there, pulled away from you. With the result that you are now heading, with great velocity, towards the hardest surface you’ve ever encountered. Eric. My love. How I had wondered, in my darkest moments, if, in those terrible seconds between the initial impact and the landing that twisted his neck and flattened the entire left side of his head, he had the horrible nanosecond realization that he was going to die. That’s the thing about free-fall. Even someone deliberately jumping out of a window must not think that there will be that horrendous impact. Until it actually happens.
I moved away from the hotel window — this jumble of free-fall thoughts spooking me.
But this was free-fall. And the landing would be a hard, despairing one: the return to my old life. The re-entry into a marriage that was lifeless, devoid of love.
The death of hope.
A living death. Based upon the recognition that the prospect of happiness had just been extinguished again.
Could I race to my car, race up to Bath, run to his front door, pound on it until he answered, fling myself in his arms, tell him we had to act upon all that we knew and felt for each other, fend off his angry wife, and convince him to drive off into the night with me?
I can’t.
Now that was me talking.
I can’t. I want to make a scene. I want to beg him to reconsider. I can’t. Not just because I know it wouldn’t change anything. But also because, quite simply, I can’t.
With this realization came more tears. I had not cried like this since the police told me about Eric. But now the anguish was underscored by twenty years of life, in which real love had been absent.
The death of hope.
I moved over to the sofa, oblivious to the fact that there were no lights on in this room; that I was alone in the dark. I replayed everything that had happened since Friday. Every remembered conversation, every story we told each other, the first time he touched my arm, that moment in the Public Gardens when he first took my hand, the nervous delight he showed when he cast off the dull insurance-man clothes, my confession about Eric, his confession about Sarah, the dawning shared realization that we were falling in love, that extraordinary first kiss, the taxi ride to this hotel, the way he promised me to be mine forever when he first entered me, all the proclamations of love and excited future plans.
And then.
The death of hope.
I can’t.
I wish I could dismiss it all as a fever, a virus, to which I briefly succumbed. But I knew it to be so concrete, so authentic, so rooted in reality. That made it even more unbearable. If it had been just some gushing, crazed romance. But this was it. The connection that I so privately longed for; the great love story I so wanted to have in the time remaining for me. To have been given a passionate glimpse of this new life — to have been told this was my future reality — and then to have had the whole magnificent edifice decimated only moments after it seemed so secure.
I now wanted to be furious, to turn my grief into pure undistilled rage. But I’ve never been able to do anger at such a vehement level. More tellingly, this was a man I was certain that I loved — and who’d shown me, in turn, the most extraordinary love. So there was just the most profound sense of loss. And of hurt.
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