: Chapter 33
The Seven Year Slip
VERA LIVED ON EIGHTY-FIRSTÂ Street, between Amsterdam and Broadway, in a four-story walk-up the color of cream stone. According to the address on her letter, she lived on the third floor in 3A. Fiona and Drew stood on the sidewalk behind me for support, though Drew still believed I should just mail the letter back instead.
âWhat if she doesnât want to see you?â she asked.
âIâd rather find out in person if someone Iâve written letters to over the last thirty years died,â Fiona argued, and her wife sighed and shook her head.
I understood where Drew was coming fromâperhaps it would have been easier to just send back the letter. My aunt and Veraâs relationship wasnât my business, but because I knew the story, I felt . . . obligated, I guess. To finish it.
I had heard so much about Vera, she almost felt like a fairy tale to meâsomeone I never thought Iâd meet. My hands were clammy, and my heart raced in my chest. Because I was about to meet her, wasnât I? I was about to meet the last piece of my auntâs puzzle.
I took a deep breath and scanned the buzzer box. The names were smudgedâalmost illegible. I squinted to try to make out the numbers at least, and pressed the buzzer for 3A.
After a moment, a quiet voice answered, âHello?â
âHiâIâm sorry to bother you. My name is Clementine West and I have the letter you sent my aunt.â Then, a bit quieter: âAnalea Collins.â
There wasnât a response for a good long moment, so long I thought that maybe I wasnât going to get a response, but then she said, âCome on up, Clementine.â
The door buzzed to unlock, and I told my friends Iâd be back in a minute.
Then I took a deep breath, and steeled my courage, and stepped into the building.
Pursuing Vera felt like opening a wound I had sutured together six months ago, but I had to. I knew I did. If she and my aunt had kept in touch over the years, then why hadnât Analea ever mentioned it? If they had stayed friends, why didnât it work out? I thought Analea had cut ties with Vera, like she had with everything she loved and refused to ruin, but apparently there were more secrets to my aunt than I had originally thought. Things she kept hidden. Things she never let anyone see.
I used to want to be exactly like my aunt. I thought she was brave and daring, and I wanted to build myself like sheâd built herself. My aunt gave me permission to be wild and unfettered, and I wanted that more than anything else, but ever since she passed Iâd recoiled from that. I didnât want to be anything like her, because I was heartbroken.
I was still heartbroken.
And now I had to tell someone else, someone who also loved Analea enough to write her letters thirty years after their time ended, exactly what I never wanted to hear again.
I stopped at apartment 3A and knocked on the door. My aunt had told me about Vera, about what she looked like, but when she opened the door I was immediately struck by how much she reminded me of my aunt. She was tall and thin, in a burnt-orange blouse and comfortable slacks. Her grayish-blond hair was cut very short, her face angular for a woman in her late sixties.
âClementine,â she greeted, and suddenly pulled me into a tight hug. Her arms were thin, so it surprised me how strong she was. âIâve heard so much about you!â
Tears prickled in my eyes, because she confirmed what I had wonderedâwhether this letter had been a fluke, or if it was another line of conversation in a long history of correspondences back and forth over years and years. And it was the latter.
Analea had kept in touch with Vera, and they had talked about me.
She smelled like oranges and fresh laundry, and I hugged her back.
âIâve heard a lot about you, too,â I murmured into her blouse.
After a moment, she let go and planted her hands on my shoulders, getting a good look at me from beneath her half-moon glasses. âYou look just like her! Almost a spitting image.â
I gave the smallest smile. Was that a compliment? âThank you.â
She stepped back to welcome me into her apartment. âCome in, come in. I was just about to make some coffee. Are you a coffee drinker? You have to be. My son makes the best coffee . . .â
What my aunt had failed to mention, however, was that Vera had a very slight Southern accent, and her apartment was filled with pictures of a small Southern town. I didnât look at them too thoroughly as I came into the living room and sat down, and she fixed us two cups of coffee and sat beside me. I was a little numb, everything a blur. After so many years of hearing stories about this woman named Vera, here she was in the flesh.
This was the woman Analea had loved so much she let her go.
âI was wondering when Iâd be able to meet you,â Vera said as she sat down beside me. âItâs a surprise, though. Is everything all right?â
In reply, I reached into my purse and pulled out the letter sheâd sent my aunt. It was a bit crinkled from battling with my wallet, but I smoothed it down and handed it back. âIâm sorry,â I began, because I wasnât sure what else to say.
She frowned as she took the unopened letter. âOh,â she whispered, realization dawning, âis she . . .â
There were things that were hard to doâcomplicated division without a calculator, a hundred-mile marathon, catching a connecting flight at LAX in twenty minutesâbut this was by far the hardest. Finding the words, mustering them up, teaching my mouth how to say themâteaching my heart how to understand them . . .
I would never wish this on anyone.
âShe passed away,â I forced out, unable to look at her, trying to keep myself tied tightly in a bow. Together. âAbout six months ago.â
Her breath hitched. Her grip on the letter tightened. âI didnât know,â she said quietly. She looked down at the letter. Then up at me again. âOh, Clementine.â She reached for my hand and squeezed it tightly. âYou see, I recently moved back to the city. My son has a job here, and I wanted to be near him,â she rambled, because it felt better than lingering on those wordsâshe passed away. She swallowed her sadness and said, after a moment, as she gathered herself back together, âMay I ask what happened?â
No, I wanted to reply, but not because I was ashamed. I wasnât sure if I could talk about it without crying.
It was why I didnât talk about it at allâwith anyone.
âShe . . . she hadnât been sleeping well, so her doctor prescribed her some medicine a while ago. And she just . . .â For all the times Iâd rehearsed this, they all failed me now. I didnât know how to explain it. I was doing a bad job. âThe neighbors called for a wellness check on New Yearâs Day when she wouldnât answer the door, but it was too late.â I pursed my lips, screwing them tightly closed as I felt a sob bubble up from my chest. âShe just went to sleep. She took enough that she knew she wouldnât wake up. They found her in her favorite chair.â
âThe blue one. Oh,â Veraâs voice cracked. She dropped the letter and pressed her hands against her mouth. âOh, Annie.â
Because what else could you say?
âIâm sorry,â I whispered, pressing my nails into my hands, focusing on the sharp pain. âThereâs no easy way to talk about it. Iâm sorry,â I repeated. âIâm sorry.â
âOh, honey, it isnât you. You did nothing wrong,â she saidâ
But I did, didnât I? I should have seen the signs. I should have saved her. I should haveâ
And then this woman whom I didnât know wrapped her arms around me and pressed me tightly into her burnt-orange blouse, and it felt like permission. The kind I hadnât let myself have for six months. The kind of permission that Iâd been waiting for, as I sat alone in my auntâs apartment, and grief welled up so high it felt suffocating. The permission I thought Iâd given myself, but it hadnât been permission to cryâit had been a command to be strong. To be okay. I told myself, over and over, I had to be okay.
And finallyâfinallyâsomeone gave me permission to come undone.
âItâs not your fault,â she said into my hair as a sob escaped my mouth.
âShe left,â I whispered, my voice tight and high. âShe left.â
And she broke my heart.
This woman who I didnât know, who Iâd only ever imagined in my auntâs stories, held me tightly as I cried, and she cried with me. I cried because she left meâshe just left, even as I chased her, her coattails fluttering, just out of reach. She left and I was still here and there were so many things she hadnât done yet, or wouldnât ever do in the future. There were sunrises sheâd never see and Christmases in Rockefeller Plaza sheâd never complain about and layovers sheâd never catch and wine sheâd never drink with me again at that yellow table of hers as we ate fettuccine that was never the same twice.
Iâd never see her again.
She was never coming back.
As I sat there crying into Veraâs shoulder, it felt like a wall had suddenly come down, all of my pent-up grief and sadness washing away like a broken dam. After a while, we finally pried ourselves apart, and she got a box of tissues and dabbed her eyes.
âWhat happened to the apartment?â she asked.
âShe gave it to me in her will,â I replied, then grabbed a few tissues and cleaned my face. It felt raw and puffy.
She nodded, looking a little relieved. âOh, good. You know it was mine before she bought it? Well, not mineâI only rented it from this stodgy old man who overcharged for it. He passed away, so I had to move out, and his family sold it to your aunt. I donât think they ever knew what it did.â
That surprised me. âThey didnât?â
âNo, they never lived there, but the renters knew. The man I took the lease over from warned me. Heâd figured out the hard way. He thought someone else had a key to the apartment and was coming in and rearranging his things! It was only after he got her name that he realized the woman who kept breaking in had passed almost five years prior.â She shook her head, but she was grinning at the memory. âI almost didnât believe him until it happened to me, and I met your aunt!â
She didnât seem much like the Vera in my auntâs stories. This Vera was more put-together, wearing a string of pearls, looking as pristine as her simply decorated apartment. And if little things were different, maybe some of my auntâs story was, too. âWhy didnât things work out?â I asked, and she gave a one-shouldered shrug.
âI canât tell you. I think she was always a little afraid of a good thing coming to an end, and oh, we were a good thing,â she said with a secret smile, her thumbs rubbing against the wax seal on the back of her letter. âI never loved anyone quite like I loved Annie. We kept in touch through letters, sometimes every other month, sometimes every other year, and we talked about our lives. Iâm not sure she ever regretted letting me go, but I wish I wouldâve fought a little more for us.â
âI know she thought about it,â I replied, remembering the night my aunt told me the whole story, the way sheâd cried at the kitchen table. âShe always wished it had ended differently, but I think she was afraid because . . . the apartment, you know. How you two met.â
Her mouth screwed into a coy smile. âShe was so afraid of change. She was afraid we would grow apart. She didnât want to ruin it, so she did what she did bestâshe preserved it for herself. Those feelings, that moment. I was so mad at her,â she admitted, âfor years. For years I was angry. And then I stopped being so angry. That was just who she was, and it was a part of her I loved with the rest of her. It was how she knew how to live, and it wasnât all bad. It was good, too. The memories are good.â
I hesitated, because how could they be good when she left us? When the last taste in our mouths was lemon drops? âEven after . . .â
Vera took my hand and squeezed it tightly. âThe memories are good,â she repeated.
I bit my bottom lip so it wouldnât wobble, and nodded, wiping my eyes with the back of my hand. The coffee sheâd brought was cold by now, and neither of us had touched it.
My phone buzzed, and I was sure it was Drew and Fiona asking if I was all right. I probably needed to get back to them, so I hugged Vera and thanked her for talking with me about my aunt.
âYou can come back anytime you want. I have stories for days,â she said, and escorted me back toward the door. Now that my head wasnât spinning, I took note of the pictures that lined the hallway.
Vera was in almost all of them, standing beside two children of varying agesâa boy and a girl both with a headful of auburn hair. Sometimes they were toddlers. Sometimes they were teenagers. Fishing at the lake, elementary school graduation, the two kids sitting on a smiling old manâs knees. They both looked very much like Vera, and I realized they must be her children. There was not another person in the photos, only ever the three of them. And I couldnât stop looking at the boy, with his dimples and pale eyes.
âMy youngest called us the Three Musketeers when she was little,â she said when she caught me staring at the collage of pictures, and it felt like I heard her through a tunnel, and she pointed at a photo of a beautiful young woman in a wedding dress beside a smiling dark-haired man. âThatâs Lily,â she said, and then motioned to the picture of a face I knew too well.
A young man with a crooked smile and bright pale eyes and curly auburn hair, in a floral chefâs apron as he cooked something over a well-loved stove. He stood beside a shorter old man with his back curled over, wearing a similar chefâs apron that read I AINâT OLD, IâM WELL-SEASONED, his eyes the same bright pale gray. I stared at the photo in bittersweet awe.
âAnd this is Iwan,â she went on, âwith my late father. Iwan really loved him.â
âOh.â My voice was tiny.
She smiled. âHeâs opening up a restaurant in the city. Iâm so proud, but heâs been so stressed latelyâI sometimes wonder if heâs doing all this because he loves it, or because of his grandpa.â
I stared at the photo of the man I knewâIwan with his crooked and infectious smile. It must have been taken just before he moved to NYC. And suddenly, something clicked, looking at that photo. Of all the things that had changed in those seven years, the most prominent was the look in his eyes. There was unabashed joy there.
And I wondered when that left.
âMaybe youâll meet him someday. Heâs very handsome,â Vera added with an eyebrow wiggle.
âHe is,â I agreed, and thanked her again for letting me cry on her shoulder, and with one last hug, I left and met my friends out front on the sidewalk, who both declaredârather immediatelyâthat I looked like I needed a drink.
They had no idea.