Read Counterpointe Online

Authors: Ann Warner

Counterpointe (37 page)

 

Then she walked out, pulling the door shut behind her.

 

It was done.

 
Chapter Twenty-two
 

One of the first things a boy learns with a chemistry set is that he’s unlikely to get another one.

 

Anonymous

 

Rob checked the spare bedroom and found the boxes gone and the closet empty except for the parrot hat he’d given Clare that first Christmas. It was shoved into the corner. Seeing it brought tears to his eyes. Why did she leave it? As a final nonverbal punctuation point to their relationship? Or did she overlook it?

 

He found a note with her new address and phone number along with keys on the dining table. The note said the paperwork for the divorce was on his desk. And so it was, neatly stacked to the side. He stared at the pages, his gut clenching, then he noticed a humming noise. When he hit the space bar, the computer screen lit up and filled with words.

 

Dear Rob,

 

I believe we truly discover ourselves only when we face difficulties. I discovered I am less courageous and less kind than I thought I was. Although that’s painful for me to acknowledge, I doubt it approaches the pain I inflicted on you.

 

There’s no way I can fully make up for hurting you, but I have tried to make what small amends are in my power. Since the failure of our marriage was my fault and mine alone, I have instructed my attorney to neither ask for, nor accept, any support or other payments.

 

You’re a good man, Rob. My greatest regret is that I was unable to love you the way you deserve.

 

Timing is critical, my love, not only in dance, but also in life. Our timing was

 

 

 

He frowned at the note. Unfinished like everything about his relationship with Clare. Still, how odd of her to leave it for him to find at some random time. He reread it, stumbling on the one sentence.
..my greatest regret is that I was unable to love you the way you deserve
…and on those oddly intimate words,
my love
. Words she’d rarely used as a form of address.

 

He stared at the screen until the words blurred.

 

“Rob, dear, it’s wonderful to see you.” His mother hugged him then stepped back with a frown. “Clare isn’t with you?”

 

“For Pete’s sake, Alice. Let the boy get his breath.” His father thumped him on the back. “It’s good to have you home, son.”

 

“Good to be home.” Rob went over to hug Lynne, arching over her bulging midriff to do it. “Looks like my niece or nephew is ready to put in an appearance.”

 

“Tomorrow would be fine with me, but the doctor says it’ll be at least another month.”

 

Pain squeezed his throat at the memory of the infant he and Clare had lost. Thank God his family didn’t know about that.

 

“Now Rob, you never said. Is Clare joining us this evening?”

 

“No, Mom, she isn’t.”

 

His dad and sister glared at his mother.

 

“Well, we do have a right to know what’s happening. We’re family, after all.”

 

“Clare and I are getting a divorce.” Just words. They hurt only if he let them.

 

“Well, I should have guessed. After all, she refused to join us for the holidays. Not much of a family girl, that one.”

 

He clenched his jaw, trying to let his mother’s comments flow past without their sharp barbs doing any damage, something that was taking more of his energy tonight than usual.

 

After the obligatory cocktails, they moved to the dining table. Lynne passed him the mashed potatoes and he added a small scoop to his plate.

 

His mother frowned. “You need to eat more than that. You’ve lost a lot of weight. You haven’t been sick, have you?”

 

He summoned a smile. “No, of course not. I’ve gotten used to smaller portions, I guess.”

 

“What was it like?” Lynne asked.

 

About as different as something gets from this.
At his family’s expectant expressions, he struggled to string words together. “Primitive...but fascinating. We ate mostly rice and beans. So this is a nice change.” He continued in that vein for a time—how they had chewed coca leaves for altitude sickness, the horrible road conditions to and from the river, his encounter with “Ronald Reagan” in Cuzco—until his mother was satisfied and turned her razor attention to Lynne and the details of her pregnancy.

 

He forced himself to eat as his family’s voices ebbed and flowed around him as if he were a stone in the middle of their conversational stream. He glanced across the table to where Clare should be sitting, remembering the first time he’d brought her home. For Thanksgiving. They’d been in silent cahoots that whole day, exchanging quick, laughing looks as the others talked.

 

“Rob, is something wrong?”

 

At his mother’s sharp tone, his body jerked. “Oh, sorry. Those two days of rough road took their toll.”

 

Lynne’s expression was full of sympathy. He wasn’t fooling her. She knew him too well.

 

When they finished eating, he pushed back his chair and stood. “Great meal, Mom. Thanks, but I’d better head home before I start having trouble keeping my eyes open.”

 

“But, we’ve hardly seen you,” she said.

 

“I’ll stop by again after I get the lab squared away.”

 

He climbed in the car and closed the door on the identically furrowed brows of his mother and sister. A relief they’d let him go with only token resistance. He should also be relieved he wouldn’t have to face Clare back at his apartment. Instead, remembering her absence, a letdown that was more than simple fatigue washed over him.

 

Rob spent a second day slogging through his mail and meeting with his research group. By six thirty he’d had enough. As he headed across campus, he was behind a man and a woman walking together. Then the woman’s quick, light way of moving registered. Clare.

 

She and her companion reached Huntington Avenue where they stopped and continued to talk intently. The man clasped Clare’s arm briefly before turning and walking back toward Rob. Rob examined him as he approached. Good-looking he supposed, if you liked the hippie type.

 

As he looked back toward Clare, the southbound trolley pulled in, blocking his view of her. When it pulled out, Clare was gone.

 

“I’m having trouble with that one bit,” Denise said.

 

Clare sighed. Her life had become so much more complex lately as she juggled her day job at Northeastern with evening visits to Hope House and the hospital. And now rehearsals with Denise and Stephan had been added to the mix.

 

“You try it.” Denise sounded exasperated. “You’ll see it’s tricky.”

 

Clare had no intention of putting her losses on display. “Let’s focus on getting the other steps learned. We can work on the difficult parts later.”

 

“It’ll take less time if you’d show me how to do it.” Denise might be sunny most of the time, but when she dug her heels in, even ballet directors walked carefully.

 

“Fine. Stephan, Wilson, take a break. Come back in fifteen minutes.” Clare slipped off her shoes. “Okay. Let’s start from the beginning.” She began marking the beats, as she went through the steps with Denise. Then she played the tape she’d brought along in case Wilson wasn’t available. When the piece ended, Denise turned to the door where Stephan and Wilson stood watching.

 

“That’s it!” Stephan walked toward them, a big grin on his face. “Not a man and a woman, but the two of you.”

 

Understanding dawned and panic set in. “Oh no you don’t. I won’t do it. I can’t.”

 

“You have no idea, do you, Clare?” Stephan said. “You were wonderful, and just think of the human interest. Everyone loves a comeback story. We’ll prime the dance critic at the
Globe
. Attendance will skyrocket.”

 

“To watch me fail. No. No way.” Her body trembled. “I’m completely out of shape. An embarrassment.”

 

“Okay,” he said. “If that’s your objection, here’s what we’ll do. Tomorrow, I’ll video the two of you dancing. If you see anything embarrassing or flawed in your performance that can’t be smoothed out with rehearsal, we’ll stop bugging you. But, you’ve got to give it your best shot
and
an honest appraisal.”

 

“You’re not going to leave me alone until I agree, are you?”

 

“Nope.”

 

Damn him. He didn’t need to sound so smug. “You have the music and the choreography. I’ve done what you asked.”

 

“Call us greedy,” Stephan said. “We want more. We want you, Clare.”

 

She wondered if that had been the plan from the beginning.

 

“Okay, Clare, here we go.” Stephan popped the tape out of the camera and prepared to play it back.

 

Her hands clenched as the tape began to play. On it, two women danced, one wearing pointe shoes and moving with assurance and a youthful vigor. The second dancer, who was barefoot, moved with a muted grace.

 

“There. You see it, don’t you?” Stephan said, pointing. “There. And there again...see that. You’ve caught it perfectly. The dancer and her shadow self. It’s going to be stunning.”

 

Clare looked away from the video screen, biting her lip. Did they think she was a fool? It was one thing to dance as part of a practice with only the four of them present. Stephan was insane if he thought she was stepping onto a stage.

 

“This piece plays directly to our theme. The beauty of the dancer in her prime, stalked by the fear of age and injury,” Stephan continued, oblivious.

 

“No.”

 

Stephan rewound the tape. “You don’t see it, do you? Look at this dancer, Clare. Forget it’s you. Look at her face. At the way she moves. The point isn’t to match Denise. This is a character part. Not a prima role. This role requires wisdom, Clare, and an understanding of loss.”

 

What did he know about loss?
Damn him.

 

“If Denise and I dance this, the symbolism is lost. With you and Denise, though. It’s pure magic.”

 

“Stephan’s right,” Wilson said. “If you won’t take his word for it, take mine. You had me in tears, Clare.”

 

“I’ll make you a deal,” Stephan said. “Come back Thursday. We have a full rehearsal scheduled. You and Denise dance this piece and see how the group reacts. If they don’t get it, we’ll leave you alone.”

 

Denise, who had been standing silently off to the side, finally spoke. “He doesn’t keep his word, he’ll answer to me, Clare.”

 

Not that it was any comfort.

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