“If you could set the table, that’d be great. Oh, and maybe put the slaw and potato salad and beans in something better looking than those plastic tubs?”
She nodded. “Hey, kiddos, who wants to be Mommy’s helper?”
“I do, I do,” they both shouted, abandoning me to follow her through the sliding glass door and into the kitchen.
“What on earth did you do to deserve her?” I asked Jeff as the door slid shut.
“I think she likes me for the foil effect,” he said. “I make her look so good by comparison. Same reason Mom keeps you around.”
I heard the quick toot of a car horn in the driveway then, followed by the clatter of the garage door opening. Kathleen was home.
Soon after, delighted squeals—“Grandmommy! Grandmommy!”—announced her arrival in the kitchen.
The slider rasped open and she emerged, her leather briefcase still slung over her shoulder. “Bill Brockton, you sneak. You didn’t tell me you were cooking.”
“I wanted to surprise you.”
“I wanted to surprise you, too,” she said. “I made us a seven o’clock reservation at the Orangery.”
“Oh, darn—I wish I’d known,” I said. She shot me a dubious look, which I countered with an innocent smile. “That would’ve been nice, honey. But I guess you’d better call and cancel.”
“I’ll call,” she said, “but I won’t cancel; I’ll reschedule, for Saturday night. You don’t get off the hook that easily. If I can survive thirty years of Cracker Barrel vittles, one fancy French dinner won’t kill you.”
She turned and headed inside. The instant the sliding-glass door closed, Jeff and I looked at each other and burst into laughter.
Dinner was loud, rowdy, and wonderful, with three terrible puns (all of them mine), two brotherly squabbles, and one spilled drink (also mine). The ribs were a hit—smoky, succulent, and tender.
Sitting at the head of the kitchen table, I surveyed my assembled family, then, with my sauce-smeared knife, I tapped the side of my iced tea glass. “A toast,” I said. The three adults looked at me expectantly; the two boys gaped as if I were addled.
“Toast?” said Walker. “Toast is breakfast, silly.”
“A toast,” Jenny explained, “is also a kind of blessing. Or a thank-you. Or a wish.”
Walker’s face furrowed, then broke into a smile. “I toast we get a dog!” His toast drew laughs from Kathleen and me, and nervous, noncommittal smiles from his parents.
“A toast,” I repeated. “To my lovely wife. To thirty wonderful years together.”
We clinked glasses all around. Kathleen looked into my eyes and smiled, but then, to my surprise, she teared up. “To this lovely moment,” she said, her voice quavering, “and this lovely family. The family that almost wasn’t.”
Now I felt my own eyes brimming. We almost never spoke of it, but none of us—Kathleen, Jeff, Jenny, or I—would ever forget the near miss to which she was alluding. The grown-ups clinked glasses again—somberly this time—and Kathleen reached out to me with her right hand. Instead of clasping hands, though, she bent her pinky finger, hooked it around mine, and squeezed. It was our secret handshake, of sorts: our reminder of what a sweet life we had, and how close—how terribly close—we’d come to losing it, right in this very room, right at this very table, a dozen years before. I lifted her hand to my face and uncrooked her finger, tracing the scar around the base and then giving it a kiss. By now the scar was a faint, thin line—barely visible and mostly forgotten, except when something triggered memories of that nightmarish night, and that evil man: Satterfield, sadistic killer of women. Satterfield, emerging from our basement, gun in hand, to bind us—Kathleen, Jeff, me, and even Jenny, Jeff’s girlfriend at the time—to the kitchen chairs. Satterfield, putting Kathleen’s finger into the fishlike jaws of a pair of gardening shears and then closing the jaws in a swift, bloody bite.
Odd, how memories can open underfoot in the blink of an eye, taking you down a rabbit hole of the mind to some subterranean, subconscious universe where different rules of time and space and logic hold sway. Part of me remained sitting at the table, my fingers smeared with barbecue sauce, but part of me had gone down that bloody rabbit hole.
Kathleen’s finger, which had sent me spinning there, now beckoned me back. She stroked my damp cheek and smiled again. “Will you marry me, Bill Brockton?” she asked.
“Yes, please,” I answered. “Again and again. Every day.” Half rising from my chair, I leaned ov
er and kissed her—a grown-up kiss, on the mouth, taking my time.
“Gross,” said Tyler.
“Gross gross gross,” agreed Walker.
IT WAS TEN-THIRTY by the time Jeff’s family was gone, the kitchen was clean, and Kathleen and I were showered and in bed. I rolled toward her on the mattress and cupped her face in one hand. “Not as romantic as the fancy French dinner you wanted,” I said, “but tasty.”
“Says the man who thinks turkey jerky is a delicacy,” she said. “But yes, delicious. And it’s always so sweet to see Jeff and Jenny with the boys. They’re such good parents, Bill.”
“They should be. You’re a great role model.”
“You, too,” she said, and then, from nowhere: “You still sad we couldn’t have more?”
“No,” I said, though that wasn’t entirely true; deep down, I would always wish I’d had a daughter as well as a son. “I’m the luckiest man alive. I couldn’t be happier.” I felt the stirrings of desire, and I slid my hand down to her hip. “Well, maybe I could be a tiny bit happier.”
She smiled, but she also shook her head. Taking my hand from her hip, she brought it to her lips and gave it a consolation-prize kiss. “I need a rain check, honey. Bad time of the month.”