CHAPTER TWENTY
 
Planning Ahead
 
The distance from which I saw Iris’ expression after our very first kiss ten years ago was no more than twelve inches. It might as well have been twenty miles. Throughout the spring, though, that distance continued to expand. I had never been entirely sure whether this was a product of my imagination or if Iris was in fact as reluctant to face me as I now was to face her. I felt a combination of guilt, validation, and frustration over the events of that afternoon. Much as I tried to convince myself that I hadn’t betrayed Chase in any way, this was by far the most significant thing I’d ever done to him behind his back. Before this, the most selfish act I’d performed to his detriment was giving myself the largest slice of pizza in the box. But at the same time, I took some consolation from the fact that Iris had at least felt enough of the things about me that I was feeling about her to allow the kiss to happen. This spoke to me on a number of levels: I hadn’t imposed myself upon her, she’d told me that I meant something to her, and kissing her had been even more thrilling than I’d expected it to be. But this was more disconcerting than the fantasies that preceded it. Kissing Iris was so overwhelmingly powerful, so soul satisfying, that it would forever change the meaning of the act or the interaction that led to the act. Kissing Iris felt the way it did because it was Iris. And yet Iris was inextricably linked with the only person in the world who meant more to me than she did. As a result, I was compelled to come down less often on weekends and to spend less time with the two of them when I was in Amber. Everything was easier that way.
 
At the wedding of my mother’s goddaughter, however, I had little choice but to be with them for an entire evening. I actually considered begging off with the excuse of a term paper (I’d used the one about my “independent studies” too often already), but Lisa’s family and ours had been close since before I was born and at the time it seemed ridiculous to change all of my plans because of my brother and his girlfriend. So the three of us drove together in my car and I made as little eye contact with Iris as possible without being obvious.
 
That doesn’t mean that I didn’t look at her. I found myself taking every opportunity to glance over at her in the reception hall while I was engaged in other conversation. Iris was wearing a strapless navy dress that ended just below the knee and she looked spectacular. Though she didn’t know many people at the wedding, she carried herself gracefully through conversations with relative strangers on the occasions when Chase was playing with someone else. Admiring her, I found it impossible not to think about how we had been together or the conversation that had led up to it. Just as it was impossible for me to fool myself into thinking that what I was feeling for her wasn’t real desire.
 
If Chase noticed any of this, he didn’t acknowledge it. On the drive over, he asked why I wasn’t coming down from Boston as much. But he never suggested that he saw any change in the way I acted around Iris. And yet I couldn’t help wondering how I was going to approach this as time went on. Making my feelings go away didn’t seem to be a viable option. Bringing the issue out into the open seemed counterproductive. And competing with Chase for Iris’ affections seemed disloyal and plainly absurd.
 
Halfway through the evening, Chase and I found ourselves thrown together in the middle of the dance floor during one of those group dances that were obligatory at weddings. As a precursor to my “madman in the water” episode later in the summer, I took this opportunity to act out of character and behave even more outrageously than my brother, dancing comically, suggestively, and utterly out of control. At one point Chase, never one to surrender the stage to another easily, stepped back and folded his arms in front of him to watch my exploits. I’m sure most of the people in the room thought I was drunk, which was fine with me, though I in fact found myself uninterested in drinking at all. Eventually, Chase rejoined me and as the song ended, we threw each other on the floor, rolling around and laughing.
 
Afterward, I went to the bar to get another Coke, dabbing perspiration from my face. Iris was there. It would have been impossible (not to mention ridiculous) to avoid her, though it was the first time we’d been together without Chase since “the moment.”
 
“You should have come out on the dance floor with us,” I said, quickly breaking eye contact to get the bartender’s attention.
 
“I didn’t want to get injured.”
 
I took my drink and turned back to her. “I guess we looked pretty stupid, huh?”
 
“You were funny.” It seemed for a moment that she was going to reach up to move some hair from my forehead, but then she put her hand back at her side. “Chase loves playing with you.”
 
I nodded. “It’ll probably look pathetic when we’re in our sixties, but I suppose we can get away with it now.”
 
“I’ll still think it’s funny when you’re in your sixties.”
 
“Then it’ll be worth it,” I said, immediately regretting having done so. This kind of comment would have seemed entirely innocent a few months before, but now it seemed charged with innuendo. Iris brought her drink to her mouth to cover whatever reaction I might have seen and then looked off behind me. A moment later, Chase came up to us, punched me on the shoulder, and threw an arm around Iris, kissing her on the neck. I excused myself and went off to find someone else I knew.
 
A short while later, I was talking to Lisa’s sister Mia near the edge of the dance floor when the band began to play “The Way You Look Tonight.” Chase and Iris were slowly spinning in time with the music and she was laughing and saying something to him that I couldn’t hear. He pulled her close and they moved together, Iris’ head on Chase’s shoulder, his eyes closed as he rested his face against her hair. Iris pulled back from him for a moment and Chase regarded her with a look of contentment I’d never seen on his face before. Then they folded together again, barely moving as couples danced nearby.
 
I tried to continue my conversation with Mia, but this vision of the two of them transfixed me. While I’d been obsessing over one moment of abandon with Iris, they were becoming more and more completely enmeshed. Never before had it seemed so obvious to me how absolutely in love they were. I knew then that it was time to stop playing with my illusions.
 
I’d been unconsciously turning my body away from Mia and toward the dance floor as I watched.
 
“Do you want to go out there?” Mia asked.
 
It took a beat for her question to register. “Nah,” I said. “Not my kind of thing.”
 
031
For the first time since I’d known Iris, I was feeling nervous as I approached her house. I was certain that it had to do with the charged atmosphere the last time we saw each other and the easy intimacy of the phone conversations we’d had since. I’d left for Lenox that morning with a huge sense of anticipation and I was sure this was what led to the bubbling in my stomach as I turned up her street. If I believed in intuition, I would have interpreted the sensation differently.
 
I’d learned via one of the dozens of e-mail newsletters I received that Richard Shindell was playing in a club in Stockbridge a couple of weeks hence. Shindell’s sometimes bleak, always passionate songs had been favorites of mine for the past several years and he was one of the first artists I’d introduced Iris to when we reconnected. I’d only seen him in concert once and knew the experience would be a richer one with another fan by my side. I bought tickets for the show online and planned to surprise Iris with this news when I saw her.
 
Iris offered me a quick kiss on the lips when she opened the door and then hugged me tightly. When she pulled back, she smiled up at me and then turned to let me into the house.
 
“Good trip?” she asked.
 
“Yeah, very good.”
 
“Doughnut or muffin?” She was referring to the pastry that accompanied my mid-drive coffee break.
 
“Neither actually. I think it’s finally gotten through to me that the combination of caffeine and sugar isn’t necessary for the last hour of the drive. I also think I’ve put on a few pounds.”
 
“I’d noticed,” she said teasingly. “I’m glad you brought it up before I had to.”
 
She walked over to the couch and sat against one side with her arms wrapped around her legs. I sat on the other end and faced her. We smiled at each other.
 
“Stop,” she said, laughing.
 
“Stop what?”
 
“Let’s just . . .” She made a flitting motion with her right hand.
 
“Let’s just be natural?”
 
“Yes.”
 
“You and I might interpret the term ‘natural’ differently.”
 
“Let’s just be us.”
 
“Whatever that means.”
 
“You know what I mean. We don’t need to be weird.” She chuckled, offering a glimpse of her girlish side and then turned to me with the most stunning grin I’d ever seen on a human being. “What are we going to do today?”
 
“I’m not sure what we’re going to do today, but I can tell you what we’re going to do on August second.”
 
“What? Planning ahead? From you?”
 
“Only in this case. Richard Shindell is playing in Stockbridge and I got us tickets.”
 
“Really?” she said, reaching over and squeezing my leg. “That’s so great. The second, you said? Let me go write that down.”
 
She stood up to go into the kitchen where a calendar hung from the refrigerator. While she did, I put Shindell’s newest album on her iPod, thinking it would be nice to sit together on the couch and listen to it before we headed off for the day.
 
Iris was in the kitchen for considerably longer than it would take to mark the date. When she came back, she offered me a compressed smile and then sat next to me on the couch. The smile didn’t say, “Let’s get cozy.” It seemed to say, “Let’s not talk for a while,” though I had no idea why. I put my arm around her shoulders, she leaned into me a little, and we sat that way through the entire album. Shindell’s complex, brooding melodies seemed appropriate for the situation, though I couldn’t have possibly said what the situation was or how the air in the room had so completely altered in such a short time while seemingly nothing happened. A few minutes in, I asked Iris if she was all right and she nodded. She’d gone from buoyant to contemplative in the time it took to walk back and forth from the kitchen and she clearly wasn’t ready to discuss it. I wondered if this wasn’t in some way her response to what the last week had been like for us and to the presumptiveness of my planning ahead.
 
When the music finished, we sat on the couch for several minutes more. Then Iris patted me on the leg and said, “Let’s go for a drive.”
 
We headed up Route 7, past Pittsfield, the iPod going the entire time (Green Day’s “21st Century Breakdown” album, Iris’ choice). Eventually, we stopped at a deli for sandwiches and ate them sitting on the grass at a nearby park. The connection between us had recalibrated again, back to what it was like just after Memorial Day. We were talking easily about surface-level things. I’d expected that this day might have some awkward moments. I’d even braced myself for the possibility that Iris was going to tell me that she didn’t want our relationship to go deeper. I was completely unprepared for what came next, though.
 
As we finished lunch, Iris lapsed into silence again, her eyes focused on the distance. I put my hand on her shoulder and she leaned her head into it for a moment before looking back out.
 
Without turning to me, she said, “I had to flip the calendar to August. The first thing I saw was the tenth.”
 
The tenth was the anniversary of Chase’s accident.
 
“It’s not like I didn’t know it was coming. But having it announce itself to me like that when I turned the page was a real shot to the stomach. Especially since I’d gone in there all excited about the concert.”
 
She looked at me with an expression that mixed sadness and something more unsettling. It seemed like defeat.
 
“I always have a hard time with that date, Hugh. An extremely hard time. It can sometimes take me days to get past it. You won’t want to be anywhere near me.”
 
“I’ll be near you,” I said. “We’ll do it together. We should do it together.”
 
She looked back out toward the horizon and leaned her head away from me.
 
“I don’t know that I’m ever going to be able to look at you without seeing him, Hugh.”
 
For months now, I’d believed that to be true. In many ways, it was true for me as well. But it didn’t matter – it wasn’t real – until Iris said it herself. And in doing so, she’d defined our future. We could continue with the fits and starts. But we would never get past this absolute. Every relationship comes to its insurmountable place. Ours happened to be the foothills, in fact the very ground itself.
 
I took her hand and stood up. “Come on, let’s head back.”
 
“We don’t have to. It’s a nice day out. Maybe we could go for a walk.
 
“No, I think we both really want to get back to Lenox.”
 
I didn’t stay that night. In fact, I didn’t stay for more than forty-five minutes after we returned to her house. I told Iris that I thought it might be a good idea for me to leave and she only made the slightest attempt to disagree. She was sitting on the couch when I kissed her forehead and said good-bye.
 
Ten years ago, I’d considered it a cruel act of destiny that the first woman to ever inspire me was committed to the person I loved more than anyone in the world. But this was exponentially harder to deal with. I knew more now. I’d been through more now. And I knew Iris better and she captivated me even more. For the first time in my life, I truly wanted someone and I was ready to make a life with her. I was willing to climb whatever mountains I needed to climb, including the several considerable ones I’d already scaled.
 
But I wasn’t willing to cause Iris pain. And what had become heartbreakingly clear to me that afternoon was that loving me was simply going to be too hard for her. If she were ever going to have a romance that stood the test of time, it was going to have to be with a person who could finally walk her beyond the events of August tenth ten years ago.
 
In other words, it could never be me.
 
032
I wasn’t supposed to be at the store the next day, but since I’d come back from Lenox earlier than I’d planned, I went in anyway. Ironically, I’d even made contingency plans in case I wound up staying an extra night with Iris if things moved forward as they seemed they might.
 
When I walked in the door, Tyler looked at me quizzically and I simply said, “You don’t want to know.” He didn’t push it, the store was busy, and we didn’t get back to it. But still, I found Tyler’s presence comforting. He wouldn’t be around much longer and I wasn’t anxious to see him go. And even though I couldn’t confide in him on this day, the very fact that he was around seemed to help.
 
When I returned to my parents’ house that night, my mother was in the kitchen and my father was on his usual perch. I called in to him and he waved back. I went to sit with my mother while she prepared dinner.
 
My mother was an earnest cook. Her meals neither offended nor dazzled the palate, but they were rich with intentions. She’d always seemed to enjoy cooking for us and I think she found a considerable amount of satisfaction in our responses. Chase had of course been the most vocal respondent, regularly suggesting she put a dish in “heavy rotation” or, occasionally, “drop it off the playlist.” I’m not sure how she was finding the inspiration to put in the effort these days. I only ate with them three times a week and my father’s most enthusiastic reaction to any meal might be, “Good, Anna,” while he focused on the television. Still, she refused to descend to a level of preparation that would have been more appropriate to my father’s ennui. Tonight, she was putting together a salad with arugula, red leaf lettuce, walnuts, mangoes, and grilled chicken.
 
I kissed her on the cheek and reached around her for a piece of mango. She slapped me on the wrist playfully.
 
“I assumed you’d be home for dinner,” she said, “though you didn’t tell me you would. A less thoughtful mother would have you eating peanut butter and jelly tonight.”
 
“And don’t think I don’t appreciate it, Mom.”
 
“Why are you here, anyway?”
 
“Things came up with Iris.”
 
While still chopping, she looked up at me briefly, looking back down at the mango when I didn’t say anything more.
 
“How are things at the store?”
 
“Really busy again today.”
 
“Anything new from that guy from Westchester?”
 
“He’s asked for a bunch more information. I guess now that we didn’t agree to just give the store away to him, he wants to make an informed bid. His daughter seemed to like the place, though.”
 
“I suppose that’s progress. And it’s very good news that the store continues to be busy.”
 
“Certainly makes the hours go faster.”
 
She looked up again to offer a faint smile and then began putting together a vinaigrette for the salad. As she was doing this, my father appeared in the doorway. As always, he was wearing his robe, but he’d cinched the sash snugly around his waist.
 
“Richard,” my mother said when she saw him.
 
“I thought we’d have dinner in the dining room tonight.”
 
“That would be good,” my mother said, whisking her dressing briskly. “We’ll be ready in a few minutes. Hugh, would you set the table?”
 
There was an unusual level of conversation at dinner that night. My father talked about the day’s news events. My mother talked about things going on in and around town, information she’d gleaned from her hours out. I told them about the customer who’d bought two Mexican tiles and one of the handmade mugs I’d purchased. My father even suggested an outing for him and my mother the next afternoon and my mother graciously agreed without asking where this was coming from.
 
It had been nearly a year since we’d last shared a meal together like this. Back then, it was hard to imagine that I’d ever consider something as casual as this to be momentous. But at the same time, I was only partially aware of what was going on. I couldn’t help but think that I wasn’t supposed to be here tonight or that the reason I was here to witness this watershed event was because of another that had happened the night before.
 
I certainly didn’t intend to talk to my parents about this. But then there was a lull in the conversation and I found it unnecessary to retreat into my own thoughts.
 
“Listen,” I said, “you know that I’ve been spending a lot of time with Iris lately, right?”
 
My mother nodded. My father looked at me as though it was the first time he’d heard Iris’ name in a decade.
 
“We’ve become really good friends. You know, we were friendly when she was with Chase and all, but in the last couple of months, we’ve been doing a lot of things together and having a good time.”
 
“Is something happening there?” My mother asked me this the way she might ask how a critically ill person was doing.
 
“Something happened. For me at least. For her, too, I think. I fell in love with her. Even with all of the reasons why I knew I shouldn’t, even with all of the weird stuff going through my head about it, I did. I just find her incredible.”
 
“But something went wrong,” my father said.
 
“Something went wrong. She just can’t do it. As I said, I’m fairly sure that she feels a lot of the same things that I’m feeling, but it isn’t enough for her. She can’t overcome the fact that I remind her of Chase, and she can’t be with me what she was with him. And on top of everything else, I’m wondering how I can possibly get past this when she can’t. Does it mean that Chase meant less to me? That I wasn’t as destroyed by his death as she was?”
 
My father took a deep breath and looked at my mother. Then the two of them turned to me.
 
“Chase died ten years ago, Hugh,” my father said. “We all lost him and none of us will ever fully recover from losing him. But it was ten years ago. We’ve been waiting a long time to hear you feel about anything the way you feel about Iris.”
 
I looked down at my plate. “Not that it matters, as it turns out.”
 
“Of course it matters,” my mother said sharply. “Don’t be stupid. It might not get you Iris and it might not even be right for the two of you to be together anyway, but it definitely matters. You have to get on with your life sometime, Hugh. God knows, we know what we’re talking about.”
 
I looked over at my father. He let out a small chuckle.
 
“Yes, I heard that, too,” he said. “Your mother knows what she’s saying. Usually does. I hope it works out with you and Iris. You don’t like doing anything the easy way, do you? I always liked her. She might just need to come around to this in stages. And none of us are as clear about this kind of thing at this time of year as we are at others. I hate August.”
 
My father looked out the window, and for a moment, I thought he was going to stare out there indefinitely again. But then he inched forward and set his elbows on the table. “And if it doesn’t work out with her, think about what’s happening right now. Think about how you’re feeling. Don’t think about this as a defeat or as an excuse to go backward.”
 
I looked down at my plate again. Nearly all of the food was gone and I didn’t remember eating any of it. I took a last bite of chicken before looking up at them again. I wasn’t sure how to tell them that I would try to keep what they said in mind, so I simply made eye contact with each of them. This seemed to be enough.
 
“Do we have dessert?” my father asked.
 
The next afternoon I got a call from Iris begging off from our plans for the next Wednesday. She said something about the Ensemble, but the only real question was who was going to make that call first. Still, I found the conversation deflating and was ready to end it moments after it began. But at least a bit of what my father said had gotten through to me.
 
“Maybe the Wednesday after next?” Iris said. I was certain she was doing it to make the separation easier.
 
“Let’s not set up anything formal,” I said. “I’m here. If you want to talk, just call me. If you want me to come up, I’m there. And it’s okay if none of it happens.”
 
She didn’t say anything and I wasn’t sure if she was upset, confused, or relieved. I said good-bye to her and hung up the phone.