CHAPTER 24
Georgie set the yellow rotary phone in front of her on the bed and stared at it. She resisted the urge to check the dial tone, just in case Neal called at that exact second.
This changed everything.
Didn’t it?
If Neal had already proposed to her in the past, then Georgie must have already convinced him in the future. It didn’t matter what happened now. What she said. Whether he called her back.
Whatever Georgie did next had already happened. She was walking in her own footsteps—there was nothing she could mess up.
She leaned close to the phone and lifted the receiver to her ear, slamming it down again as soon as she heard a dial tone.
Is that what this whole week was about, preserving the status quo? Maybe she should be grateful for that. . . .
But Georgie had thought—she’d hoped—that this wrinkle in time was offering her a shot at something better.
God, what good is a magic phone, anyway? It isn’t a time machine.
Georgie couldn’t change the past—she could only talk at it. If Georgie had a proper time machine, maybe she could actually fix her marriage. She could go back to the moment that everything started to go bad, and change course.
Except . . .
There hadn’t really been a moment like that.
Things didn’t go bad between Georgie and Neal. Things were always bad—and always good. Their marriage was like a set of scales constantly balancing itself. And then, at some point, when neither of them was paying attention, they’d tipped so far over into bad, they’d settled there. Now only an enormous amount of good would shift them back. An impossible amount of good.
The good that was left between them didn’t carry enough weight. . . .
The kisses that still felt like kisses. The notes Neal stuck to the refrigerator when Georgie got home late. (A sleepy cartoon tortoise with a word bubble telling her there were leftover enchiladas on the bottom shelf.) Shared glances when one of the girls said something silly. The way Neal still put his arm around her when they all went to the movies. (He was probably just more comfortable that way.)
So much of what was still good between them was through Alice and Noomi—but Alice and Noomi were so solidly between them.
Georgie was pretty sure that having kids was the worst thing you could do to a marriage. Sure, you could survive it. You could survive a giant boulder falling on your head—that didn’t mean it was good for you.
Kids took a fathomless amount of time and energy. . . . And they took it first. They had right of first refusal on everything you had to offer.
At the end of the day—after work, after trying to spend some sort of meaningful time with Alice and Noomi—Georgie was usually too tired to make things right with Neal before they fell asleep. So things stayed wrong. And the girls just kept giving them something else to talk about, something else to focus on. . . .
Something else to love.
When Georgie and Neal were smiling at each other, it was almost always over Alice and Noomi’s heads.
And Georgie wasn’t sure she’d risk changing that . . . even if she could.
Having kids sent a tornado through your marriage, then made you happy for the devastation. Even if you could rebuild everything just the way it was before, you’d never want to.
If Georgie could talk to herself in the past, before the scales tipped, what would she say? What could she say?
Love him.
Love him more.
Would that make a difference?
When Georgie was eight months pregnant with Alice, she and Neal still hadn’t settled on a day care.
Georgie thought maybe they should get a nanny. They could almost afford one. She and Seth had just started working on their third show, a CBS sitcom about four mismatched roommates who hung out in a coffee shop. Neal called it Store-Brand Friends.
Neal was working in pharmaceutical research then. He’d thought about graduate school for a while but didn’t know what he wanted to study, so he got a job in a lab. Then he got another job in another lab. He hated it, but at least he worked better hours than Georgie. Neal was done every day by five—and home making dinner by six.
There was a nice day care they were considering on the studio lot. They went and visited, and Georgie put their name on the waiting list.
It was going to be fine, Neal said. It was all going to be fine.
It was just happening so fast.
They’d always assumed they’d have kids someday, but they hadn’t really talked through the details. The closest they’d come was on that first date, when Georgie said that she wanted kids and Neal hadn’t argued.
After they’d been married for seven years, it seemed like they should probably get on with it—the trying, not the talking. Georgie was already thirty, and lots of her friends had had fertility problems. . . .
She got pregnant the first month they stopped using condoms.
And then it was happening. And they still didn’t talk about it. There was no time. Georgie was so tired by the time she got home from the show, she fell asleep most nights on the couch during prime time. Neal would wake her up and walk behind her up their narrow staircase, his hands supporting her hips and his head resting between her shoulder blades.
It was all going to be fine, he said.
Georgie was thirty-seven weeks along when they went out to celebrate their eighth wedding anniversary. They walked to an Indian restaurant near their house—their old house in Silver Lake—and Neal talked her into having a glass of wine. (“One glass of red wine isn’t going to hurt at this point.”) They talked about the studio day care some more; it was Montessori, Georgie said—for probably the third time that night—and the kids had their own vegetable garden.
There was an Indian family sitting one table over. Georgie was terrible at guessing kids’ ages before she had her own, but the family had a little girl who must have been about a year and a half. She was toddling from chair to chair, and she reached out and grabbed Georgie’s armrest, smiling up at her triumphantly. The girl wore a pink silk dress and pink silk leggings. She had a cap of black hair and gold studs in her ears. “Oh—sorry,” the girl’s mother said, leaning over and sweeping the child up onto her lap.
Georgie set her glass down too hard, and wine splashed out onto the yellow tablecloth.
“Are you okay?” Neal asked, his eyes dropping to her stomach. He’d been looking at Georgie differently since she started to show, like she might split open at anytime without warning.
“I’m fine,” she said, but her chin was wobbling.
“Georgie—” Neal took her hand. “—what’s wrong?”
“I don’t know what we’re doing,” she whispered. “I don’t know why we’re doing this.”
“Why we’re doing what?”
“Having a baby,” she said, glancing tearfully over at the pink-swathed toddler. “We’re just—all we ever talk about is what we’re going to do with it when we’re not there. Who’s going to raise it?”
“We are.”
“From six to eight P.M.?”
Neal sat back in his chair. “I thought you wanted this.”
“Maybe I was wrong. Maybe I shouldn’t get what I want.” Maybe I don’t deserve it.
Neal didn’t tell her it would all be fine. He seemed too shocked to speak. Or maybe too angry. He just watched Georgie cry—his brow low, his jaw forward—and refused to finish his chana masala.
The next morning he told her he was quitting his job.
“You can’t quit your job,” Georgie said. She was still lying in bed. Neal had brought her a mug of hot black tea and a plate of scrambled eggs.
“Why not?” he said. “I hate it.”
He did hate it. He’d been there three years, the pay was terrible, and his boss was an unrepentant egomaniac who liked to brag about “curing cancer.”
“Yeah,” she said, “but . . . do you even want to stay home?”
Neal shrugged. “You’re going to be miserable if we put this baby in day care.”
“I’ll get over it,” Georgie said, knowing that she would and feeling guilty about that, too.
“You don’t want me to stay home?”
“I haven’t thought about it, have you?”
“There isn’t anything to think about,” he said. “I can do this. You can’t. We don’t need my paycheck.”
“But . . .” Georgie felt like she should argue, but she didn’t know where to start. And, actually, she really, really liked this idea. She already felt better about the baby, knowing that it would be with Neal, that they wouldn’t be turning it (they didn’t know the gender yet, but they’d settled on “Alice” or “Eli”) over to a stranger nine hours a day.
“You’re sure?” she asked, moving to get out of bed. She was huge—Georgie got huge with both pregnancies—and she was having spasms in her lower back every time she sat up. Neal bent in front of her so she could put her arms around his neck, then pulled her upright with his hands on her hips. “It’s a big sacrifice,” she said.
“Taking care of my own child isn’t a sacrifice. It’s what parents do.”
“Yeah, but are you sure? Don’t you want to think about this?”
Neal was looking at Georgie’s face, not smiling—just meeting her eyes without flinching, so she’d know he was serious. “I’m positive.”
“Okay,” she said, and kissed him, already feeling so relieved. And feeling some sort of evolutionary satisfaction. Like she’d made the right decision picking this man; he was going to find all the best sticks for their nest and chase off all the predators.
They stood together, curled over the mass of baby between them, and Georgie felt like everything was going to be fine.
That’s how Neal had become a stay-at-home dad.
That’s how Neal had thrown away his own career before he’d even figured out what he wanted from it.
What would happen now? If they stayed together? (God, was she really asking that question?)
Noomi would start school next year. Would Neal go back to work then? What would he want to do—what would he want to be?
A railroad detective?