Rebound: Chapter 15
Rebound: A standalone, second chance romance
Five days later, back in the ârealâ world, we finally agree on a statement about our separation. Weâve already filed, so thereâs no point in hoping that nobody will noticeâeventually, they will. The statement was drafted up by Mason with our input, and itâs short and simple.
âAfter more than two decades together, Jamestech CEO Elijah James and his wife Amber have agreed to part ways,â it reads. âThe decision has been made jointly and amicably and is grounded in mutual love and respect. Amber and Elijah remain close friends and will continue to support each other as they enter the next stage of their lives.â
Then thereâs some extra flimflam about respecting our privacy, which we all know in the age of instant social media and online news is unlikely to happen. Mason is going to post it on the company website tomorrow morning, and it wonât take long to spread after that.
It feels odd, knowing those words will be out there. That it will all become real. Journalists will contact me for comment, and acquaintances will be surprised. Our marriage will become part of the rumor mill. People will gossip about us over lunch, wondering what went wrong for the apparently perfect Mr. and Mrs. James. What we donât provide in fact, they will supply in fiction. And by the end of the week, Elijah will probably be having an affair with his secretary, I will have discovered God and joined a convent, and both of us will have âpossiblyâ been spotted at sex clubs with a dominatrix.
Tongues will wag so hard they might fall off. I know all of this because Iâve been guilty of doing it myself. Never maliciously, I hope, and never in a way intended to spread harm, but Iâve gossiped over cocktails. Iâve reduced other peopleâs lives to entertainment. Iâm sure most people have.
Interest in our separation will fade, though, because thatâs the way these things work. As long as we remain quiet and dignified, people will soon get bored of us and the fuss will die down.
I am surprised at how much pain I feel. After the other night, part of me wondered if things would change course. If either of us would have second thoughts. Obviously, we didnât, and while I might know thatâs for the best, this feels awful. I donât give a damn about the gossip, but this is a step closer to the end of my marriage, to the end of something I once thought was sacred.
I hit reply all to the email chain Iâm part ofâme, Elijah, Mason, and Drakeâand confirm that Iâm happy to go ahead. Happy, of course, is not really the right word. Iâm terrified. Uncertain and anxious. Although I instigated this turn of events, it still hurts. I keep the tone of my response polite and businesslike, but inside I am unbearably sad.
Our strange and magical interlude in Elijahâs hotel room definitely showed that there is still something between us, and weâve exchanged a few sexy messages since. Thatâs certainly been fun and exciting, but clearly neither of us feels itâs enough to sustain a whole marriage.
Drake contacted me separately to ask if I want to delay the statement, assuring me that thereâs no rush at all. Bless his heart, heâs trying to give us the opportunity to rethink. But he would have asked Elijah first, and my husband obviously didnât draw the proceedings to a halt.
Yes, there is still something between us, but thatâs only natural after so long together. Maybe itâs simply a leftover, a reminder of what once was. Whatever it is, itâs not enough to reverse all the damage weâve done to each other.
I donât quite understand how one version of us is calmly discussing logistics with Drake, and another version of us is using burner phones to carry on our illicit âaffair.â Then again, thereâs a hell of a lot that I donât understand about the world.
After Iâve approved the release, I message Martha and ask if she wants to meet up for drinks soon. I donât really want to, but the news will be out tomorrow, and sheâs the closest thing I have to a friend in Elijahâs and my shared world. Sheâll have questions, and I owe her after abandoning her to go fuck my husband. Interestingly, now that I think about it, we both studiously avoided talking about our men during our night out.
Thatâs not unusualâweâre not exactly soul sistersâbut Freddieâs name did not pass her lips even once, and I didnât discuss anything about my own marriage. I know why I stayed quiet, but she was equally close-mouthed.
Freddie is one of the toughest divorce lawyers in the country. He has a reputation for ruthlessly championing his clients and skewering his victims on their behalf, but he is, ironically, also a lousy husband. His constant cheating is well-known to our entire social circle, and I donât know how Martha tolerates it. I guess we all make compromises in life. At least Elijah didnât do that to me. He cheated with his work, with his family, but never another woman.
One day, though, he will meet someone else. That is what I want for himâat least itâs what I told him, and myself, that I wanted. But Iâm realizing how devastated I will be when it happens.
Shit, my life is a mess. I go with the flow of that thought and get another crappy task doneâI call my parents to warn them that the news is breaking tomorrow. When I told them about the split, predictably enough, their only concern was how much Iâd be taking away with me financially. The whole conversation was full of dire warnings, stories about women who were left homeless and missing a kidney after brutal divorces. There was pretty much zero concern for my wellbeing, and in my momâs case, a cynical tone of voice implied she expected this. She even uttered the immortal words, âWell, at least there arenât any children to make it more difficult.â
I long ago came to terms with the fact that my parents are emotionally incompetent, but sometimes I still find myself hoping for their support, and itâs a painful shock when I realize yet again that not only is it not available, but it never was. Granny Lucille makes up for both of them though.
Itâs midafternoon now, and Iâm at home alone. Iâve paused all of my social engagements for the foreseeable future and have way too much time on my hands. Elijah has been in Seoul for work, and Iâve been trying to keep busy and tick off some of the things on my list. I thought âlearn a new skillâ would be a fairly easy item to start with. However, Iâve already taken up crochet, jewelry design, painting, and needlepoint. Quickly, I realized I neither enjoy nor have the talent for any of them.
So instead, I organized the contents of my entire closet and donated an embarrassingly large pile of barely worn designer clothes to charity. Iâve also organized every other closet in the houseâexcept for Elijahâs. It didnât feel right to go through his things.
I need a job, a purpose of some kind, or Iâll go mad. I need to find something that ignites my passion or at least does some good in the world. Melanie, Nathanâs wife, still works as a veterinary nurse, and Amelia is still Drakeâs secretary. That makes me feel even worse. They both have billionaire partners and managed to keep their own identities. It is a bit different for them, thoughâthey were already in their thirties when they met their James boys. I was only nineteen. I grew up with mine, molded my life around him. Itâs daunting, this whole unraveling, but as Granny Lucille said, itâs never too late to change.
I sit down with my laptop and look up examples of résumés on employment websites. I am ashamed to say that I have never needed to write one. Elijah proposed to me when I was still in college. I didnât possess any driving ambition to build a corporate career, but I did have some grand ideas about changing the world. Maybe working for nonprofits or setting up my own charity. But then, marrying Elijah presented me with a new roleâbeing the perfect corporate wife and mom. The next Verona James. And it was a role that I wanted. One I truly relished for a short time. I made it my own, and while I didnât do any of the changing the world stuff I envisaged, I did make a difference.
There are plenty of people who look down on society wives and their charity work, but I took it seriously. I chose to make a difference the best way I knew while maintaining my most important role as Mrs. Elijah James. Perhaps it was an old-fashioned idea, too old-fashioned for a woman like me. But I adored Elijah and wanted nothing more than to build our world together. I was happy to simply be a wife and a mother, to play my part that way. As it turned out, I wasnât great at the former, and I was never given the opportunity to try out the latter.
I browse the advice on the website Iâm currently on and pull a face. Even the made-up people populating the résumé templates seem a lot more impressive than me. Iâm sure I could get some dreadful figurehead job just because of who I amâwho I was?âbut I donât want that. I want something real. My life from now on, I have promised myself, will be real.
My own résumé is pretty thin, so I decide to explore the âgetting back into the workplaceâ suggestion by doing some voluntary work. Except in my case, itâs getting in, not getting back in. It makes sense. Volunteering will give me the chance to gain experience and find out what I might want to do in the next stage of my life, as Mason put it. I start to scout out some opportunities but quickly find that filling out a résumé is harder than it seems. How do I succinctly say what it is I have to offer?
I do have a little hands-on work experience from the soup kitchen I volunteer for every Thanksgiving and all the dinners, auctions, and galas I organized. Plus, Iâve literally raised millions of dollars for charity and boosted the funds of hundreds of different causes, from hospitals to theaters to retired circus folk. But nearly all of that has been done at a distance. Sure, I cajoled and convinced and used my position of influence to make all of those events a success, but I rarely got involved in the grassroots work. I rarely contributed in any way other than financial and as a representative of the James family. The vulnerability required to offer myself up like that on a regular basis was outside my wheelhouse and probably still is, but Iâm done keeping walls up between me and the rest of the world.
Iâm not an idiotâIâm aware that most charities would prefer a nice big check to someone like me turning up on their doorstep. I mean, what use am I, really? I have no tangible or practical skills. I canât build a wall or tend a garden, fix a broken toilet or drive a bus. Iâm a society wife who has good contacts and enjoys organizing. Or at least, thatâs what I have been up until now. Itâs time to find out what I will be next.
Granny Lucille knew what she was doing when she bought me that notebook and told me to make my lists. Itâs helped, even if only by showing me what I donât want to do. I carry it with me everywhere, and right now I turn to my âlearn a new skillâ list and grimace at all the things Iâve crossed offâand not because I learned them. Perhaps I should change it to simply âtry new things.â I jot down âdo something hands-on and make a differenceâ under the crossed-out needlepoint. Then I add in parentheses, âand stop feeling sorry for yourself.â I feel more determined as soon as Iâve done that. Like I now have to make it happen or Iâll be letting Lucille down.
When I turn back to my computer, I decide to register with a website that matches volunteers to roles in New York and soon realize that my initial self-assessment was completely incorrect. I have a whole plethora of skills that plenty of recruiters are looking for. I just need to figure out how to sell myself in a whole new way. It might take me a little time, but time is one thing I have plenty of.
If nothing else, itâs a distraction from the gnawing sadness thatâs eating away at me. This is a time of transition, and itâs natural to feel upset, but I canât sit around like this forever. There needs to be more to my life than missing Elijah.
Iâm still looking online when our cleaner arrives. Vicky stands before me with her feather duster, obviously surprised to find me at home. She really is a great lady. A brunette in her mid-thirties, she always has a smile on her face and a song on her lips despite the challenges that life has thrown at her. âOh! Mrs. J,â she says. âWhat are you doing here?â
âI live here, Vicky,â I reply, grinning so she knows Iâm joking.
âOh yeah. I forgot,â she jokes back. âHow was your trip?â
âIt was really good, thanks for asking. How are things with you and the family?â
She chats away for a few minutes, updating me on the state of affairs in Vicky-land, and I realize that I will miss her. Iâm the one who manages coordinating and communicating with the team of people who work for us, and I hope I have been a fair and supportive employer. I very much enjoy the friendly relationships Iâve fostered with everyone. Who knows? As people keep warning me, divorces can turn nasty. I might end up knocking on Vicky or Dionneâs door one night asking for a spot on their couch.
In all seriousness, I really donât want to stay in this house, and that will eventually mean change for my staff. That gets added to my mental list of things to doâmake sure they are treated well. Elijah is a good man who would never knowingly screw a hardworking person over, but it also might not occur to him to think about the housekeeper, the cleaner, or Stuey, the guy who handles general maintenance. Iâll talk to him about it. That and a million other little details need to be ironed out. Huh. Ironing. Another thing I suck at. My life skills are seriously subpar.
âYou all right there, Mrs. J?â Vicky asks. âYou seem a little ⦠out of whack.â
I have no clue how much she knows. Probably more than Iâd imagine. Our staff has access to the intimate details of our lives. The separate bedrooms. The separate meals.
âIâve been better, truthfully, Vicky, but thatâs a story for another day. But I have been thinking about doing some volunteer work. Please sit, will you?â
She nods and takes the chair opposite me. When we do chat, itâs usually while she works. Sheâs an energetic soul who sees sitting still as a waste of her valuable time. âDonât you already do enough, Mrs. J? I mean, all those committees youâre on, all those events you organize.â
âIâm thinking of something a bit more ⦠practical. Iâd like to meet different people. Get out of my comfort zone. Feel like Iâm helping. I want to actually do something, you know?â
She frowns as she turns it over. I probably sound like a lunatic to her. My life must look so perfect, so carefree, with all its wealth and privilege. Even with the separate rooms, she must think I have it made while she zooms around, caring for her kids and working.
âYeah, must be boring, mixing with those snooty women with the sticks up their butts. You never really seemed like that.â
I have to smile. Itâs not the worldâs greatest compliment, but Iâll take it.
âWhat did you have in mind?â she continues. âWhat are you into?â
âIâm not totally sure, but Iâm open to ideas. I used to like ballet and trained in it for years. I enjoy wildlife, as long as itâs not too wildâI love watching the squirrels in the park. I, uh, I suppose Iâm pretty interested in people? You know, in their stories?â
âYou mean youâre nosy?â she says, giving me a cheeky wink. âIn a good way. You listen to me ramble on, Mrs. J, and not all my clients even see me as a human being, so I really appreciate that. What about kids, you like them?â
âIs this the part where I say something like âyes, but I couldnât eat a whole oneâ?â
She laughs, and I bite my lip as I think it over. I have raised money for childrenâs charities, but I have avoided spending much time with little ones. To start with, it was simply too hard to be around something I wanted so desperately and couldnât have. Then, as my contemporaries and college friends started to have their own families, I struggled even more. Itâs not something Iâm proud of, but seeing them with their big pregnant tummies and then their beautiful babies was too much. I was jealous and resentful. Itâs a big part of why I donât have any genuine friendships these daysâthere was a natural divide. Their lives became about playdates and preschools and houses in the suburbs. Mine would never be that, and their journey into motherhood took them farther and farther away from me. Our shared experiences shrunk, and I started to find them unbearably smug. They werenât, I see that now, but it was how I felt.
I nod at Vicky, who is waiting patiently for my response. âYes. I do like kids.â Itâs the truth. I adore them in all their noise and mess and joyous chaos. And maybe Iâm ready now. More mature. Able to cope with being around them.
âWell, look, Mrs. Jâ ââ
âPlease, call me Amber.â
âOkay, so, Amber ⦠Thereâs a community center near where we live in Queens thatâs always looking for people. Not gonna lie, itâs not your usual type of place.â
âIâm not looking for my usual. Go on,â I say.
âLOJ isnât the kind of organization that gets a lot of attention, you know? Nobodyâs going to be planning fancy dinners to raise money for it any time soon, but it does a lot of good. The neighborhood ainât the best, but that just means there are more people in need, if you know what I mean.â
I nod, interested. âDid you say LOJ? What does it stand for? And what kind of things do they do?â
âYeah, itâs the Leslie Odom Jr. Community Center, and they offer a bit of everything. They hold coffee mornings, bingo, art classes, self-defense, coaching for various sports, and they run a community garden. You name it, they do it. A lot of the older folks rely on it for company, and it keeps the kids out of trouble. Some of them, anyway. They do their best. How do you feel about motorcycles?â
Itâs an abrupt swerve, but I ride it out. âNever been on one. No plans to. Is that a deal-breaker?â
âNah, just wanted to mention it because some of the guys who hang out there are bikers. Rough around the edges but good hearts.â
She stops mid-flow and shakes her head. âIt ⦠Look, Mrs. JâAmber ⦠Now that I say it all out loud, Iâm thinking itâs not the place for you. I donât think Mr. J would like you being there either.â
I say nothing in response to that one. What Elijah would and wouldnât like is irrelevant, but those are muddy waters I donât want to dive into.
Vicky obviously thinks her world would be too tough for me. She probably thinks Iâm soft and weak, and that her community would eat me alive. Like most people, though, she doesnât really understand how tough I actually am. There are many different types of strength, and Iâm not even remotely put off.
âBut do you think I could be any use?â I ask her. âNot just ⦠donate? I mean, it sounds great, and I will do that as well. Really, though, Iâd like to find something more active.â
She raises her eyebrows and looks surprised. âYeah, they could use you. The kids love dancing, and their teacher just left. Maybe you could you do that.â
âI donât know. Iâm not a teacher. I havenât danced for years.â
âWell, thereâs no harm in giving it a shot. Thereâs other stuff too. Hey, you could always do the cleaning.â She raises her feather duster in the air, and we both laugh at the idea.
Except, I wouldnât mind. I might not have Vickyâs skills, but Iâm guessing I could swing a mop if I needed to. âSpeaking of which,â she says, âI really better be getting on. You want me to call the center, tell âem you might be in touch?â
âYes, please. And Vicky? Thank you. I really appreciate it.â
âNo worries, Amber. Us girls have to stick together, right?â
I feel oddly uplifted by our conversation. She didnât dismiss me or write me off as deluded, and her suggestion energized me. I should try this asking-for-help thing more often.
I have no idea if this LOJ Community Center idea will work. Iâm not sure Iâve ever even been in Queens. Iâve certainly driven through it, but shamefully, my world has been mostly limited to Manhattan. Perhaps this is all part of my life rehabâexpanding my horizons.
I listen to Vicky singing away in the backgroundââBad Romanceâ by Lady Gagaâand glance at my phone. It is still only midafternoon. Iâd go for a walk, but the weather is dreadful. November is behaving badly, with lower-than-normal temperatures and lots of violent wind and rain. I wonder how the squirrels are coping and spend a few moments of worrying for them. Should I take them some food, try to set up some kind of shelter? I remind myself that the squirrels have survived for many years without my interference, and theyâll undoubtedly be fine.
I wonder what Elijahâs doing right now. Is he as sad as I am about the breakup statement? Probably not. He doesnât have the time to sit around being self-indulgent. He might have meetings, even though itâs the weekend. He could be with his family, playing with little Luke while Dalton hosts them all for a day-long brunch. I suspect he hasnât even given it a second thought.
I hear a beeping noise, and at first I donât recognize it.
When I remember where Iâve heard that sound before, I dig the burner phone from the pocket where I keep it hidden in my purse. Only one person has the number, and itâs as though I was thinking about him so hard I manifested him.
My heart rate speeds up, and I look at the screen.