“Again, no clue,” he said.
“You want to meet my kids, Mickey, perhaps you should think on sharing what’s happening with Cill and Ash in an official way,” I suggested. “If it’s out in the open, you can discuss it with her.”
“Great. My Sunday plans look only slightly better than my Friday night plans did.”
I grinned, lifted my head from his shoulder and looked to his jaw. “It’s not like we’re not used to this road being rocky.”
He didn’t look down at me.
He said to the dark night, “You’re right. The fuck of it is, you grow up thinkin’ things are gonna be a certain way and then they end up mostly fucked with moments of decent and flashes of really fuckin’ good.”
I snuggled my cheek to his shoulder, hating that.
Mickey had a boss he did not respect, a job he didn’t like doing that bought him taking a lot of complaints from angry people about decisions he did not make.
He’d had a wife he loved who’d become an alcoholic right before his eyes. He lost her and now she was making him live in fear for his kids not only when they were with her but what her effect was on them when they weren’t.
He needed to become fire chief.
He needed to get his business off the ground.
And Rhiannon needed to sort herself out.
As for me, I needed to do what I could to give Mickey as many flashes of really fucking good as I could.
Mickey read my mood but he read it wrong.
“Sorry, baby, you don’t need my bitching.”
“Actually, I do,” I returned. “Because if you don’t lay it on me, it’ll eat you up inside and your kids need you whole, standing and fighting. So I’ll take whatever you got. It isn’t hard. So you have that and you have what you need to take care of your babies.”
Mickey was silent and the night was still. This lasted so long it made me tense.
“Mickey?”
“Sixteen years. Fuck, that asshole blew it.”
I relaxed against him.
“I spoiled our kids,” I admitted. “Gave them everything they wanted.”
“Yeah, got a dose of that,” he returned.
“Conrad didn’t like it. He talked to me. I didn’t listen.”
“God, fuck, sorry. You’re right. It’s a wonder your kids are functioning instead of in inpatient therapy. Now I get it. You spoiled your kids. That guy had every reason to step out on you.”
There was lightness to his voice but just to be sure, I asked, “Are you joking?”
“Fuck yeah, Amy. Shit,” he answered, his voice shaking.
I pressed my cheek into his chest and also started shaking.
Then audibly giggling.
Mickey audibly chuckled with me.
When I stopped, I lifted my glass and took a sip of wine.
When Mickey stopped, he did the same with his beer.
We fell silent and sat in the dark.
But I did it hoping it was one of Mickey Donovan’s moments of decent.
Or maybe even a hint of a flash of happy.
*
The next afternoon, my phone on my kitchen counter rang.
I saw it was Mickey calling and I snatched it up, glanced at my landing, saw the TV on and bits of both my kids’ limbs. Neither of them looked my way, so casually, I took the call while walking to the hall and heading toward my bedroom.
“Hey,” I answered.
“Hey back. Havin’ a good day?”
“I think so, although I’m a little concerned about what appears to be evidence that suggests my kids have a serious television habit.”
“They’re there again?”
I made it to my room, silently shut the door and went to my bed to sit on it, saying, “Yes. It’s Sunday but they texted this morning around ten, were here within the hour. We had lunch. We took the Rover out for a spin. And we’re having dinner.”
“This is good, Amy.”
“It is, Mickey. So good. Amazingly good. But a little freaky.”
“Kids watch TV, babe.”
“I know. But something about this isn’t right.”
“How’s that?”
“One minute they’re barely speaking to me. And it wasn’t like the next minute they were. We worked up to it, got over the hump, skidded down the other side.” I crossed my legs under me on my bed. “But now we’re speeding. They’re here a lot and I want them here a lot. I want them here for good. I’d take them here forever. But there’s something about this change that makes me think that either they’re escaping their dad’s or Martine is perpetuating cruel and unusual punishment by not allowing two teenage kids to DVR anything.”
“Maybe they saw they were bein’ hard on you and they’re tryin’ to make up for it,” he suggested.
“Maybe,” I mumbled.
“Go with it. Build on it. And just have this good without makin’ it dark when you don’t know if there’s anything to worry about.”
That was good advice.
“I’ll do that.”
“Good,” he said. “Now, speaking of kids.”
“Oh boy,” I muttered.
“Yeah. Ash and Cill know their friend and next door neighbor, Amy, is Dad’s girlfriend.”
The girlfriend again.
It felt nice again.
But I was still braced.