“Oh, the mask. And the weird hat. I get it.”
He took another step until he could close the door behind him. “You don’t seem impressed.”
I’m wondering how you make that costume look so good… “I’m confused.”
“About?”
“Why are you here, Nick?”
“This conversation again? Honestly, Katie, did we talk about anything besides my location when we were married?”
I wanted to punch him. Instead, I stepped back, away from him and his cologne and that adorable costume and the bags of candy in his hands. If he could change topics without warning, so could I. “I thought you would have a gig tonight.”
He shook his head. “I’m not in the band anymore, remember?”
“Like at all? I thought that was just a temporary thing?” Something warm bloomed inside of me. It grew hotter the longer I stared at him. Hotter and hotter until it was boiling inside of me, until it was lava and magma and the temperature of the sun.
The doorbell rang, interrupting our conversation. He opened it because he was closest and smiled down at the little kids dressed up as a robot and a dinosaur while simultaneously holding Annie back with his foot. She wanted to charge the kids. They looked like they wanted to run away screaming in terror.
My guard dog.
All twenty pounds of her.
Nick dropped his bags of unopened candy on the bench I had just been sitting on and grabbed handfuls of candy from my bowl.
I stood there dumbstruck. What was happening?
After they left, he closed the screen door but left the big door open. “I’m not in the band anymore, Kate. They found another lead singer.”
“Oh my gosh, were you pissed?”
He threw a smile over his shoulder as he grabbed more candy for the next round of trick-or-treaters. “I sold them my old amps and gave them my blessing. I, uh, retired.”
“You retired?” I hated that this divorce had turned me into a parrot. Was losing the ability to have original thoughts a side effect of divorce trauma?
He handed out more candy while I stood there blankly. More kids came to the door, dragging their parents with them.
While I stood there watching mutely, Nick talked to our neighbor for a little bit, shooting the shit and discussing the most mundane stuff ever. Neither of them acknowledged me. Chris, our neighbor, didn’t even notice me at all. Or at least he pretended not to.
After we were alone again, I tried to form words. “You quit the band?”
“I prefer retired, but yeah, I guess that’s what happened.”
“But… but… Why?”
He shifted his shoulders and it was the first time I noticed tension in him since he arrived. His back had gone taut with some emotion that I wanted to believe was frustration or anger. But I couldn’t make myself believe it.
I couldn’t read him at all anymore. His eyes were hidden from me in the dim entryway and behind a black mask. I couldn’t see them. All I had to read him by was his body language and his lean body didn’t say much underneath a black and white stripped t-shirt and his familiar low-waist jeans. It wasn’t that complicated of a costume, but for some reason it really got to me.
It bothered me that he’d dressed up and looked so good and on top of that, he’d showed up at my house with extra candy.
He wanted to make our divorce as difficult as possible and my life hell. And yet he was here. Like this.
It wasn’t fair.
He wasn’t playing fair.
The burn inside me became a searing force that actually hurt me.
“You were right, Kate. It was time.”
“I was right?” My words sputtered from my lips with jolting disbelief. “So that’s it? We decide to end things and then you quit the band? Are you serious?”
He turned around to face me. “I said you were right.”
“I heard what you said! But why couldn’t you have said that to me while we were still married?” I felt breathless with anger, blind with it.
“We are still married.”
“Nick!”