False Memory
she folded them on the table, Susan said, His excuse? Well... I dont know.
Were all the way down the rabbit hole and at the tea party, Martie declared, exasperated. What do you mean you dont know? Honey, you catch him having an affair, and you dont want to know why?
Susan shifted uneasily in her chair. We didnt talk about it much.
Are you serious? That isnt you, girlfriend. Youre no milquetoast.
Susan spoke more slowly than usual, with a thickness of tone like that in the voice of a freshly roused sleeper who was not yet fully awake: Well, we talked about it a little, you know, and this could be the cause of my agoraphobia, but we didnt talk the dirty details.
This conversation had grown so deeply strange that Martie sensed a hidden and perilous truth in it, an elusive insight that would suddenly explain all of this troubled womans problems, if only she could grasp it.
Susans statements were simultaneously outrageous and vague. Disturbingly vague.
What was this womans name? Martie asked.
I dont know.
Good God. Eric didnt tell you?
Finally Susan raised her head. Her eyes were unfocused, as though she were staring at someone other than Martie, in another place and time. Eric?
Susan had spoken the name with such puzzlement that Martie turned in her chair to survey the room behind her, expecting to find that Eric had silently entered. He wasnt there.
Yeah, Sooz, remember old Eric? Hubby. Adulterer. Swine.
I didnt...
What?
Now Susans voice faded to a whisper, and her face was eerily devoid of expression, as inanimate as the face of a doll. I didnt learn about this from Eric.
Then who told you?
No reply.
The wind dropped, not shrieking anymore. But its cold whispering and sly cooing knotted the nerves more effectively than had its voice at full bleat.
Sooz? Who told you Eric was screwing around?
Susans flawless skin was no longer the color of peaches and cream, but as pale and translucent as skimmed milk. A single drop of perspiration appeared at her hairline.
Reaching across the table, Martie held one hand in front of her friends face.
Susan apparently didnt see it. She stared through the hand.
Who? Martie gently insisted.
Suddenly, numerous beads of sweat were strung across Susans brow. Her hands had been folded on the table, but now they were fiercely clenched, the skin stretched tight and white across the knuckles, the fingernails of her right hand digging hard into the flesh of her left.
Ghost spiders crawled along the back of Marties neck and crept down the staircase of her spine.
Who told you Eric was screwing around?
Still staring at some specter, Susan tried to speak but could not get a word out. Her mouth turned soft, trembled, as though she were about to break into tears.
Susan seemed to have been silenced by a phantom hand. The sense of another presence in the room was so powerful that Martie wanted to turn again and look behind her; but no one would be there.
Her hand was still raised in front of Susan. She snapped her fingers.
Susan twitched, blinked. She looked at the cards that Martie had pushed aside, and incredibly she smiled. Whipped my ass good. You want another beer?
Her demeanor had changed in an instant.
Martie said, You didnt answer my question.
What question?
Who told you Eric was screwing around?
Oh, Martie, this is too boring.
I dont find it boring. You
I wont talk about this, Susan said with airy dismissiveness, rather than with anger or embarrassment, either of which would have seemed more appropriate. She waved one hand as if she were chasing off a bothersome fly. Im sorry I brought it up.
Good grief, Sooz, you cant drop a bombshell like that and then just,
Im in a good mood. I dont want to spoil it. Lets talk Martha Stewart crap or gossip, or something frivolous. She sprang up from her chair almost girlishly. On the way into the kitchen, she said, What was your decision on that beer?
This was one of those days when being sober didnt have a lot of appeal, but Martie declined a second Tsingtao anyway.
In the kitchen, Susan began singing New Attitude, Patti LaBelles classic tune. Her voice was good, and she sang with buoyant conviction, especially when the lyrics claimed Im in control, my worries are few.
Even if Martie had known nothing about Susan Jagger, she was sure
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