One
Long Regret
I
love the aquarium at night. Gone the shrieking schoolchildren herded by
frazzled teachers, the dreamy-eyed lovers, the lonely singles At night it’s
just me. Until Michael comes, that is. It’s our anniversary or what would have
been our anniversary had our wedding happened.
I slip into my mermaid
costume. It’s easier since the accident. My limbs are more flexible, my joints
fluid. Without a ripple, I become one with the water. I dive into the blue
depths. A group of clown fish, dart into the waving fronds of their anemone home. How the fish recognize my presence I’ve never
understood. Dogs do too. They whine. Cats hiss. People? Completely unaware.
I stare out through the
glass. The viewing room is dim. Over there is the spot Michael and I met, two
new employees on orientation day. And there is the little amphitheater where we
fell in love, after hours, one winter’s night. And here, right in front of this
saltwater micro-world, is where we planned to stand in gown and tux, to take our
vows until death do us part.
It’s been three years
since the unthinkable happened. I close my eyes, remembering Joe’s car skidding
on that icy road. One minute we were in the front seat of his Camaro, jamming to
some band, the next we were screaming and flying out windows. I stayed conscious
long enough to hear Joe’s moans. I suffered no physical pain and only briefly
endured the agonizing knowledge it was just supposed to be a last fling with
rich, handsome Joe before I settled into forever with Michael. That night
wasn’t supposed to end with Joe in a coma and me on a morgue slab.
Michael appears in the
doorway. He looks so good. A bottle of champagne rests in the crook of his arm.
A carry-out bag from Delfino’s, our favorite restaurant, dangles from his hand.
Three years and still he remembers! I feel like crying, but I can’t shed tears.
This body, invisible to all but me, puts out nothing, although it remembers being
flesh and blood. Sometimes those sensations drive me almost mad. Like right
now. If only I could hug away the pain in Michael’s expression.
Why did I ever give in to
Joe’s pursuit of me? I adored Michael but let myself be talked into a promise
of one night of guilty pleasure. It got me nothing but death and the man I
loved coming here year after year to honor me in the best way he knows how.
Michael sets down his
cargo. He removes his backpack, takes out a white tablecloth and two wine
flutes and places them on the table. He adds a single yellow rose to a bud vase
he sets in the middle of the tablecloth. He’s reenacting our first date. I
frown. The rose should be red. Maybe he couldn’t find one. The important thing
is, even after three anniversaries without me, I’m still in his thoughts. I
feel sad, yet comforted. Without Michael’s devotion, I fear I might disappear
forever.
He approaches the tank, looks
me full in the face. I swear he can see me though I know he can’t. I press my
mouth to the glass. I miss his lips on mine.
“You were beautiful.” He
says. “I remember your mermaid’s tail flashing while you did acrobatics for the
crowds.”
Then he abruptly steps back.
His mouth flattens to a hard line. I know that expression. He rarely directed
it toward me, but many times I saw it when someone else displeased him. Why is
he angry now?
Smell, taste, and most of
touch are lost to me, but sight and hearing are still mine. I watch Michael’s
mouth open, then close. He turns away, then back again.
He shakes his head. “Dammit, I loved you, Desiree. You were my
world.”
Startled, I hold my hands
out, aching to touch something even if it’s only the glass separating us.
What’s wrong with him? I loved you too,
Michael.
He shakes his head. “I
stuck up for you. It looked bad, you being out with Joe. I convinced myself he
was only giving you a ride on a stormy night.”
Yes.
Believe that.
“But Joe woke up a few
weeks ago.”
Wait
– what?
“Joe remembers. He
remembers it all, Desiree. His body is broken, but there’s nothing wrong with
his memory. How could you cheat on me with him?”
Nothing
happened. Just one car ride. That’s not completely
true. Something was going to happen. We were headed for a secluded inn. You were out of town, Michael. You were
never to find out.
“Joe’s telling everyone,
Desiree. He’s crying that you’re dead. Crying over my girl.”
I can’t bear how
Michael’s backing away. It can’t end like this. I still need him.
“I’m done,” he’s saying.
“I’ve mourned you long enough. It’s time I stopped living in a past that wasn’t
as perfect as I thought it was. Look at me, talking to a dead woman.”
The door opens again,
revealing a girl. She’s pretty. Lots of black curly hair. Michael beckons her
to the table, and they sit. I think it’s a first date. They don’t touch. They
fumble with words. Still, there’s something in the air between them, a spark as
alive as I am dead.
The tableau continues
unfolding. She smells the rose. He uncorks the champagne. It’s all familiar.
She’s taking my place. It’s so unfair to be dead, yet able to experience such
grief. I instinctively place my hands over my mouth, but I needn’t bother. My
scream feels violent, but it comes out silent. A nearby fish darts away in a
different direction. Michael and the girl do not notice. They’re looking at each
other.
I’m becoming translucent.
Floating with the current, I fade a little more with each ticking minute. All
the “I could haves” spread out before me like petals on a rose, like bubbles in
champagne. I am gone.