Discretion was not one of her virtues. And what a relief! Erica had taken up cross-stitching instead of with another man. It felt like real progress. If only it would last.
I moved on. âAre you taking your medication?â
Erica whipped her face away from me as though something interesting had caught her attention on the far side of the road. âWhich one?â
She only takes two: one for her bipolar disorder and one to prevent ⦠Iâd never had to ask her about that one before. âWhat do you mean, âWhich one?â?â
A bottle cap lay in the road ahead of us. I watched as Erica stooped to pick it up and place it in her pocket. Sheâd been collecting them for years, some from beers sheâd consumed, others from bars sheâd frequented, and the rest from other peopleâs discarded trash. The caps blended nicely with her enormous wine cork collection, and I didnât think she was even aware she was doing it anymore. She didnât seem about to answer my question, so I prompted her along.
âLet me be specific. Are you taking the medication Dr. Albert prescribes for you?â Dr. Albert was Ericaâs stud-muffin psychiatrist she saw once a month for her bipolar disorder. Iâd considered developing a mental health issue just to spend some time with him alone myself.
âYeah.â
âAnd is it working?â
âIt quiets the buzzing.â
That was the best we could hope for because the buzzing would never completely disappear. âAnd are you taking your birth control pills?â
Erica started walking faster. She mumbled an answer.
I hustled to catch up to her. âI didnât hear you.â
She stopped dead. âIâm taking them, but donât tell Maury.â
I got that sick feeling in the pit of my stomach again, a feeling I could really live without. âWhy not?â
âBecause â¦â she heaved a huge sigh, âhe thinks weâre trying to get pregnant.â
My blood turned to ice. âAnd are you ⦠trying?â
âGod, no. Never. Never ever.â
I should have felt relieved. After all, Ray and I had split for three years after I refused to have a baby with him, fearing the family mental illness gene would be passed on to our child. It seemed far more likely that Erica could pass it on to a child. But instead of relief, I felt concern. A marriage built on lies wasnât going to last long.
âWhy are you pretending otherwise?â
Erica kicked a pebble off the sidewalk. It zinged a nearby mailbox.
âMaury was all over me yesterday that we needed to do something together. He thinks weâre growing apart. I never want to watch his stupid Japanese animated cartoons and I didnât go to the Glen with him. He says we need to find a hobby where we canââshe flicked quotation marks as she rolled her eyesââbond. He wanted to take up canoeing. Heâs always wanted to take up canoeing, or so he says. Our landlord broke up with his girlfriend, and he offered Maury the use of his canoe, since heâs not going to be taking her out of the lake anymore. Maury thinks itâs the perfect time toââher fingers flicked againâ âget out on the lake. Heâs obsessed with the idea.â
I loved how she referred to âour landlord.â Erica and Maury lived in my old apartment, and I was pretty sure I was the only one regularly writing checks to the man who owned the 1870s Victorian and lived in the apartment above their first floor love nest.
âItâs not such a bad idea. Whatâs wrong with canoeing?â
âWhat do you think of when you hear the word âcanoeâ?â
âAh, Indians, birch bark, um ⦠paddles? I donât know. Why?â
âI think âtippy,â âtippy canoe.â I canât even swim. I donât want to canoe.â
Our mother had stayed on this earth long enough to enroll
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