Not relief exactly either.
Something closer to self-recognition.
The next morning I called my financial adviser.
Her name is Marlene, and she has managed my retirement accounts since Frank died eight years ago, which is how she came to know more of my life than most people do. Frank was my second husband, not Daniel’s father, a decent steady man who loved baseball on the radio and never once made me feel like a burden. Marlene answered on the second ring in the efficient voice she uses before coffee.
“I want to review the automatic transfers to Daniel,” I said.
There was a tiny pause.
“All right,” she said. “Do you want to reduce them or stop them?”
Stop.
The word sat between my teeth like something both foreign and exact.
Daniel and I had arranged two years earlier that I would help for a while with the mortgage when rates jumped and Sophie’s company reorganized and everyone was talking about temporary strain. Temporary had stretched, as such things do when no one revisits them. The transfers went out each month with the quiet invisibility of all habitual caretaking. I had not questioned them because questioning them would have required a conversation I dreaded. Also, if I am honest, because continuing to provide gave me the comforting illusion that I still held a valued role in their lives.
Marlene made the changes while I was on the phone.
“Done,” she said.
I thanked her, hung up, and sat for a full minute with my hands folded in my lap.
Then I called my attorney’s office and updated my health care directive. For twelve years Daniel had been listed as my primary contact in case of emergency. I changed it to my neighbor Ruth, who had lived two houses down for two decades and once drove me to urgent care in her slippers when I sliced my thumb on a broken jar. It was not vengeance. It was accuracy. The person most likely to show up calmly, promptly, and without making my crisis about their inconvenience was Ruth. Paperwork should tell the truth.
For three days I did not answer Daniel’s calls.
The first morning, I woke before six out of old habit and felt the absence of obligation before I even opened my eyes. No motel room. No children rustling wrappers in another bed. No Sophie already dressed and tapping her itinerary against one thigh. Just my own ceiling fan chopping the dawn into soft pieces and the distant sound of a garbage truck backing somewhere down the block. I lay there longer than usual, not sleeping, simply occupying my own bed without hurry. It sounds like almost nothing. It felt revolutionary.
I watered my hydrangeas.
I grocery-shopped at Kroger on Tuesday morning before the crowds, buying cherries, yogurt, salad greens, rye bread, and the expensive coffee I usually talked myself out of because nobody should spend that much on beans for one person. In the produce aisle, I realized I had not once all week chosen food based on what I actually wanted. Every stop on the trip had been some negotiation of children’s tastes, Daniel’s appetite, Sophie’s plan. I stood in front of a display of peaches with the cool mist hissing over them and thought, I can buy exactly what I feel like eating. The freedom of that nearly made me laugh aloud.
I came home, sliced one of the peaches over the sink, and let the juice run down my wrist.
That afternoon Ruth spotted me deadheading the petunias and called over the fence, “Thought you were in Wyoming.”
“I was,” I said.
She studied my face for one second longer than neighborly politeness usually allows and said, “Coffee later?”
There are friends who ask for details, and friends who offer a chair. Ruth has always been the second kind. I went over at four. She poured coffee into two chipped mugs and set out a plate of vanilla wafers neither of us needed. I told her enough for her to understand and not enough to make myself perform the injury. She listened with her hands folded around her mug and said, when I was done, “You know this isn’t about one vacation.”
“No,” I said. “It isn’t.”
She nodded as if I had reported the weather accurately.
“Good,” she said. “Sometimes the body knows before the mouth catches up.”
I carried that sentence home with me and set it down beside the others I had been collecting.
The second day I finished my novel on the couch with the window open and a fan turning overhead. A thunderstorm moved through around three, quick and theatrical, slapping rain against the screens and then rolling east. I made grilled cheese and tomato soup for dinner because I wanted the taste of childhood and because no one was there to call it too simple or too much sodium or not enough protein for growing kids. My phone rang twice during the meal. I watched it light up from across the room and kept eating.
The third day was the bakery morning. I ordered coffee and a cinnamon pastry and sat by the front glass watching people pass on the sidewalk with dogs and strollers and dry cleaning. No one expected me to carry bags or mediate moods or fill in the gaps of their itinerary. I was not child care support. I was not Mom in reserve. I was not the additional wallet at the steakhouse. I was simply a woman in a striped blouse with a pastry fork and a quiet hour to herself.
It is difficult to explain to people who have never been overused how intoxicating that can be.
By the fourth day, Daniel came to the house.
I saw his car from the window before he knocked. For a moment I considered not answering. Not as punishment. Simply because I liked, very much, the fact that I did not have to answer if I did not want to. That was part of the change too, learning that the choice itself had value. In the end I opened the door.