Landline
Page 52“Just hurry. I don’t want to miss Neal.”
“Jingle Bell Rock” was playing inside the mall, and inside the store, and inside the dressing room in the Intimates Department.
There was already a jumble of bras on the floor, and Georgie was trying on more, facing away from the mirror. She was so distracted, she kept forgetting to pay attention to which ones fit.
Just pick one, Georgie. Or buy them all. It doesn’t matter. You’re just killing time.
Jesus, what a weird time to kill time. The fate of her future hung in the balance, and there was nothing she could do at the moment but run out the clock. At least, not until Neal called back.
He would call back, right?
What if he didn’t, what if he was too angry? What if he was still angry tomorrow morning?
Georgie had to talk to Neal, to make things right again. She had to make sure that he still got into his car tomorrow, his tomorrow, and showed up at her door on Christmas Day.
But what if he didn’t?
Did Georgie really believe that the last fifteen years would just unravel? Had she committed so completely to this bizarre scenario that she thought her marriage was going to start fading out, like Marty McFly in the middle of “Earth Angel”?
What else could she think? She had to keep playing along—the stakes were too high.
If Neal didn’t show up to propose to her in 1998 . . .
Twenty-two-year-old Georgie would never know what she was missing. That girl thought it was already over, that she’d already lost him.
Georgie collapsed that week after Neal left for Omaha.
It’s not like Neal was offering her some compelling alternate plan: “Georgie, I want to be a sheep farmer—it’s in my blood, and I can’t do it anywhere but Montana.” (Was that where sheep were farmed?) “I need you. Come with me.”
No, Neal was just saying, “I hate it here, I hate this. I hate that you want this.”
All he was offering Georgie were negatives.
And then he’d taken even those off the table. He’d left without her—broken up with her on his way out of town.
Georgie had genuinely believed they were broken up.
For the first few days that Neal was gone, she felt it like an actual breach between her ribs, a tear at the bottom of her lungs. Georgie would wake up in a panic sure that she’d run out of air—or that she’d lost the ability to hold it inside of her.
Then the breath would hit her like a baseball to the heart.
The air was right there; she just had to think about it. In, out. In, out. She wondered if she was going to have to spend the rest of her life reminding herself to breathe. Maybe that would be her internal monologue from now on. In, out. In, out.
Neal didn’t call to apologize to Georgie that week, either.
Why should he? she thought at the time. What did he have to apologize for? For not wanting exactly what Georgie wanted? For realizing what his limitations were?
Good for him for knowing himself so well.
Good for him for figuring it out.
Neal loved her, Georgie knew that. He couldn’t keep his hands off her—he couldn’t keep his ink off her; he was always doodling on her stomach or her thigh or her shoulder. He kept a set of Prismacolor markers by his bed, and when Georgie took a shower, the water ran rainbows.
Good for him for realizing it wasn’t enough to make him happy. That was very mature of him. He was probably saving them both a lot of heartache.
Oh God, oh God, oh God.
In-out, in-out, in-out.
Stay with me, stay-ay.
By that Christmas morning, Georgie hadn’t made any emotional progress from the breakup. She wasn’t feeling any better or stronger.
She was pretty sure that every Christmas from then on would be tainted by Neal leaving. Like Georgie would never be able to hear “Jingle Bells” again without feeling Neal drive away from her with a tow chain in her stomach.
Seth kept calling to check on her, but she didn’t want to talk to him. She didn’t want to hear him tell her how much better off she was without Neal.
Georgie wasn’t better off. Even if Neal was right—even if they’d never make it work together, even if they were fundamentally wrong for each other—she still wasn’t better off without him. (Even if your heart is broken and attacking you, you’re still not better off without it.)
Her mom made Georgie come out to the living room Christmas morning to watch Heather open her presents. Heather was three, just old enough to understand that everything under the tree was for her. Georgie sat on the couch in flannel pajama pants and a ratty T-shirt, and ate pancakes with her fingers.
Kendrick was there. He was still new then. He brought Georgie a movie-theater gift certificate with a bow on it. Heather got a talking Teletubby, which she was currently spazzing out over.
He—Kendrick, not the Teletubby—kept trying to talk to Georgie, and he was trying so hard, Georgie didn’t have the heart to ignore him. (But she didn’t have any heart at all, so that made conversation difficult.) When the doorbell rang, Kendrick jumped up to answer it, probably just to get away from Georgie.
“It’s your friend Neal,” he said when he came back to the living room.
“You mean Seth,” she said.
Georgie set down her plate and got off the couch.
“Why didn’t you invite him in?” her mom asked Kendrick.
“He said he’d rather wait outside.”
Georgie didn’t believe it was Neal. She couldn’t believe it was Neal. First of all, because Neal was in Omaha—he wouldn’t have skipped Christmas in Omaha. And second, because they were broken up. And third, because if Georgie did believe it was Neal, and then it turned out that it wasn’t? That might be it. That might finish her.
The front door was still open when she got there.
Neal was standing on the other side of the screen, biting his lip and squinting up her block, like he was waiting for her to come from the other direction.
Neal.
Neal, Neal, Neal.
Georgie’s hand trembled as she pushed the screen door open.
Neal turned to her, and his eyes got wide. Almost like he hadn’t let himself believe it was really going to be her.