I gave Elinor the code for the gate earlier and told Mitchell to put Echo away for the night.
My heart is hammering as I swing open the front door. And there she is. My mother-in-law. The first thing I see is the nervous look in her eye. The second thing I see is the dress. She’s in a dress. A wrap dress. Elinor Sherman is wearing a wrap dress?
I blink in astonishment. I’ve never seen Elinor in anything other than a suit, or perhaps a very structured evening gown. Where did she even get this? She must have gone out to buy it specially.
It’s not the greatest fit. She’s so skinny, it swathes her body a little too loosely. And I wouldn’t have chosen that brown and cream print for her. But the point is, she’s in it. She made the effort. It’s as if she’s taken off her armor.
Her hair is different too. I can’t quite work out how, because Elinor’s hair has always been a mystery to me. It’s not so much hair as a helmet. (Sometimes I even wonder if it’s a wig.) But tonight it’s looser in some way. Softer.
“You look great!” I whisper, and squeeze her bony hand. “Well done! OK. Ready?”
As we walk toward the kitchen, I feel sick with apprehension, but I force myself to keep going. I can do this. I need to do this. We can’t go the rest of our lives with Elinor an outcast.
And we’re in. I retrieve the heavy key from the drawer where I’ve been keeping them all safe from Minnie, and hastily lock the door. Then I turn to face Luke, breathing hard.
I don’t know what I was expecting.… I don’t know what I was hoping.…
OK, I do know what I was hoping. I was secretly hoping that Luke would look up, and his face would turn from shock to rueful understanding to wise acceptance, and he’d say something simple like, Mother. It’s time for peace. I see that now. And we wouldn’t need the intervention at all.
But that’s not what happens. He stares at Elinor in shock, but his expression doesn’t change. Or if it does, it gets worse. As he turns to me, shock veers to icy fury. For the first time ever, his expression actually scares me.
“You’re joking,” he says, his voice colder than I’ve ever heard it. “You’re fucking joking.”
“I’m not joking,” I say, my voice trembling.
Luke gazes at me a moment more, then strides to the kitchen door, without even glancing at Elinor.
“I’ve locked it,” I call after him. “This is an intervention!”
“A what?” He wheels round, his hand on the door handle.
“An intervention. We have a problem and we need to fix it and we’re not leaving this room till we do,” I say more bravely than I feel.
For a while no one moves. Luke has fixed his eyes on mine, and it’s as though we’re having a private, silent conversation. It’s as though I can hear his words: You didn’t. You didn’t.
And I’m replying: I did. I so did.
At last, Luke swings round to the fridge and pulls out a bottle of wine. He pours a glass and hands it to Elinor, saying abruptly, “What do you want?”
My heart sinks. He sounds like a sulky toddler.
“She’s your mother,” I say. “Don’t speak to her like that.”
“She’s not my mother,” says Luke harshly.
“I’m not his mother,” echoes Elinor, even more harshly, and I see the surprise flash through Luke’s eyes.
They’re so similar. I mean, that’s the irony. They look like they’ve come out of the same Russian-doll set, standing rigid, their chins tight, and their eyes steely with determination.
“I forfeited the right to be your mother many years ago,” Elinor says, more quietly. “I know that, Luke. But I would like to be Minnie’s grandmother. And your … friend.” She glances at me, and I give her an encouraging nod.
I know how hard this must be for Elinor. It so doesn’t come naturally. But, honestly, with her hair loosened, holding a glass of wine, using the word “friend,” she almost sounds normal. She takes a tentative step toward Luke, and I long for him to see her the way I do. But he’s prickling all over with suspicion. He doesn’t want to see.
“I still don’t get it,” he says. “Why are you here?”
“She’s here because this is nuts!” I say, unable to stay quiet. “You’re flesh and blood. You’re connected, OK, whether you like it or not. And one day you’ll both be dead!”
OK, that just popped out. Not sure where I was going with that.
“We’ll both be dead?” says Luke disbelievingly. “Why the hell is that relevant?”
“Because …” I flounder for a moment. “Because you’ll be in heaven or floating around in the sky, or wherever, OK?”
“Floating in the sky.” Luke raises an eyebrow.
“Yes. And you’ll look back at your life, and you won’t remember any one argument or one hurtful comment, you’ll remember the relationships you had. You’ll see a great big pattern to your life. And your pattern is all wrong, Luke. Don’t let one false stitch spoil your pattern.”
Luke doesn’t react. Is he even listening?
“Do you realize that by cutting off contact with your mother, you’re spoiling Minnie’s pattern too?” I warm to my theme. “And what about my pattern? You know, life isn’t just about your own pattern, Luke. All the patterns weave together, and they make, like, a worldwide web of patterns, like an über-pattern, and—”
“Jesus Christ!” Luke expostulates. “Enough with the bloody patterns!”