“There’s a lot to take care of, Elsie. We can meet at the bar downstairs.” Her voice is curt, uninterested, and cold. I tell her I will meet her there at three. It’s almost one. “Whatever is convenient for you,” she says and gets off the phone.
None of this is convenient for me. What would be convenient for me is to fall asleep and never wake up. That’s what would be convenient for me. What would be convenient for me is to be at work right now because everything is fine and Ben will be home tonight for dinner around seven and we’re having tacos. That’s convenient for me. Talking to the mother-in-law I met yesterday about funeral arrangements for my dead husband isn’t convenient for me no matter what time it happens in the afternoon.
I get back in bed, overwhelmed by everything I need to do before I meet with her. I’ll need to shower, to get dressed, to get in the car, to drive, to park. It’s too much. When Ana comes back, I’m in tears with gratitude because I know she will take care of everything.
I arrive at the hotel a few minutes late. Ana goes to park the car and says she’ll be in the lobby. She says to text her if I need her. I walk into the bar area and scan for Susan. It’s cold in this bar despite being warm outside. I hate air-conditioning. I moved here to be warm. The room is brand-new but made to look old. There’s a chalkboard menu behind the bar that’s too clean to be from the era the decorator would like you to believe. The stools are reminiscent of a speakeasy, but they aren’t cracked and worn. They look pristine and unused. This is the age we live in; we are able to have nostalgia for things made yesterday. I would have loved this bar last week, when I liked things cool and clean. Now I hate it for being false and inauthentic.
I finally spot Susan sitting at a high table in the back. She is reading the menu, head down, hand covering her face. She glances up and spots me. As we look at each other for a moment, I can see that her eyes are swollen and red but her face means business.
“Hi,” I say as I sit down. She does not get up to greet me.
“Hi,” she says as she adjusts herself in her seat. “I stopped by Ben’s apartment last night to try to—”
“Ben’s apartment?”
“Off Santa Monica Boulevard. I talked to his roommate and he told me that Ben moved out last month.”
“Right,” I say.
“He said Ben moved in with a girl named Elsie.”
“That’s me,” I say, excited by the prospect of her believing me.
“I gathered as much,” she says drily. Then she pulls a binder from the floor and puts it in front of me. “I received this from the funeral home. It’s a list of options for the service.”
“Okay,” I say.
“Decisions will need to be made regarding flowers, the ceremony, the obituary, et cetera.”
“Sure.” I don’t entirely know what the “et cetera” is. I’ve never been in this situation before.
“I think it’s best you tend to those duties.”
“Me?” Yesterday she didn’t even believe I had a right to be at the hospital. Now she wants me to plan his funeral? “You don’t want to have any input?” I say, dubious.
“No. I won’t be joining you. I think it’s best you take care of this yourself. You want to be his next of kin . . . ”
She trails off, but I know how she was going to end it. She was going to say, “You want to be his next of kin, you got it.” I ignore her attitude and try to keep Ben—my Ben, her Ben, our Ben—in mind.
“But . . . his family should be involved.”
“I am the only family Ben has, Elsie. Had. I am all he had.”
“I know. I just meant . . . you should be involved in this. We should do this together.”
She is quiet as she gives me a tight and rueful smile. She looks down at the utensils on the table. She plays with the napkins and saltshaker. “Ben clearly did not want me involved in his life. I don’t see why I should be intimately involved in his death.”