She nods.
“I want them back now. I want to walk upstairs and see them sitting on the couch. Waiting another week to see them is too damn long, let alone Thanksgiving.” Tears are threatening now. “Jesus Christ, my life is so fucked up.”
She smiles sadly. “I’m sorry your children’s mother is the Antichrist,” I nod in agreement, “but you’ll figure the rest out.”
I nod.
“In the meantime, it sounds like my company is doing nothing to help your situation.” It’s an apology that comes before the apology…that comes before the delivery of bad news.
I narrow my eyes.
She smiles sweetly, but her eyes are already welling up. “I’m sorry, Seamus. We can’t be together, we both know it. You’ll never get your kids back if we are.” She looks up at the ceiling blinking rapidly, but it doesn’t dam the tears. They break free and roll down her cheeks. She’s still not looking at me. “You have no idea how much it hurts to say that. It fucking kills me.” She drops her chin and lines her eyes up with mine, and I feel the words in her stare. “I’ve moved around a lot in my life. I’ve met a lot of people. I like your heart, Seamus.” She cups my cheek, kisses me softly on the corner of my mouth, and whispers, “My heart really likes your heart.”
She’s right.
I don’t want her to be right.
But she is.
Goddammit.
I stand up with her help. And we have a long conversation with our eyes. I tell her everything my mouth can’t say because words are futile and don’t have a future beyond her front door.
And then I ask her for another hug.
The embrace is everything we just said with our eyes. Every promise we couldn’t make. I don’t want to let her go. Her t-shirt is balled up in my fists in a desperate attempt to wring every last bit of Faith out of this moment and take it with me when I walk out that door. Her tears have soaked the front of my shirt by the time we part. And when I walk out neither one of us says anything, because there’s nothing left to say.
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph
present
My desk phone rings as soon as I unlock my office door.
“This is Mr. McIntyre,” I answer.
“Seamus,” Janet clears her throat, “can you please come to the office to see me immediately. I’m sorry.” The way she says it makes me uncomfortable. I like Janet, but I’m beginning to hate it when she calls.
I walk slowly as if the bad news will diminish or disappear by the time I get there if I take my time.
It doesn’t.
Janet waves me into an empty office to the right of her desk and closes the door behind us. I don’t know what she’s about to say, but I’m already thankful for the privacy she’s provided. She hands me a form. “They want you to take a drug test this morning, Seamus. You’ll need to leave right now to make the appointment.” She’s biting her bottom lip like she’s sorry she has to deliver the news, and she hopes I’m clean, all in one worrying gesture.
“Who’s they?”
She looks around like we aren’t alone and then she lowers her voice, “I’m not supposed to say anything, but administration called Friday afternoon to inform me of the screening appointment.” She stops and nervously licks her lips. “And earlier in the day, a manila envelope was delivered to Principal Brentwood from your ex-wife’s attorney’s office. It wasn’t sealed, only clasped,” she closes her eyes when she admits her wrongdoing, “and I opened it and read the documents inside. There was a letter stating your suspected drug use and a photo—”
I stop her. “Jesus.”
“Mary and Joseph,” she says under her breath. It’s a statement of solidarity. She knows I’ve been through hell with Miranda. “Seamus, this is serious. Any suspicion of drug use results in immediate testing, you know that. And if found positive, there’s a zero tolerance policy, you would be terminated.” She’s asking, without asking, if I can pass the test.
I hold her gaze and plead with her, “I don’t do drugs, Janet. You have to believe me. It’s not what it looks like.”
She nods her head in relief. “I believe you, Seamus. Now, take the test and prove it to them.”
I took the test.
I was clean.
Fuck you, Miranda.
No one measures up to a saint
past
True to my word I filed for divorce, and had Seamus served with papers Monday while he was at work.
He didn’t see it coming.
He’s waiting up for me when I get home late. The kids are already in bed, as usual. I should’ve gone to a hotel, but the house is big enough for all of us to live in and continue to avoid each other.
He’s sitting, facing the front door, in an armchair he’s dragged in from the living room, when I walk in. He’s clutching a bottle of beer in his hand. There are five identical, empty bottles lined up at his feet. “Who is he?”
I’m irritated that he’s not letting me set my purse down or take my jacket off, before he starts attacking me. I don’t answer him right away.