Her Fearful Symmetry

Her Fearful Symmetry Read Free Page B

Book: Her Fearful Symmetry Read Free
Author: Audrey Niffenegger
Tags: prose_contemporary
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hear him talking to himself, a low, amiable mumble; it could almost have been the radio.
This is Radio Insanity,
she thought,
coming at you with all the latest and greatest OCD hits.
    She wanted to leave the letter in a place where he would find it soon, but not too soon. And she wanted to leave it in a spot that wasn’t already problematic for Martin, so that he’d be able to pick the letter up and open it. But she didn’t want to put it in a place which would be contaminated by the presence of the letter, which would then be forever associated with the letter and therefore out-of-bounds to Martin in the future.
    She’d been pondering this dilemma for weeks without settling on a spot. She’d almost given up and resolved to post the letter, but she didn’t want Martin to worry when she didn’t come home from work.
I wish I could leave it hovering in midair,
she thought. And then she smiled and went to get her sewing kit.
    Marijke stood in Martin’s office next to his computer, trying to steady her hands enough to thread the needle in the pool of yellow light from his desk lamp. Their flat was very dark; Martin had papered over the windows and she could only tell that it was morning by the white light that showed through the Sellotape at the edges of the newspaper. Needle threaded, she whipped a few stitches around the edge of the envelope and then stood on Martin’s chair to tape the end of the thread to the ceiling. Marijke was tall, but she had to stretch, and for a moment she had a sensation of vertigo, wobbling on the chair in the dark room.
It would be a bad joke if I fell and broke myself now.
She imagined herself on the floor with her head cracked open, the letter dangling above her. But a second later she recovered her balance and stepped off the chair. The letter seemed to levitate above the desk.
Perfect.
She gathered her sewing things and pushed in the chair.
    Martin called her name. Marijke stood frozen. “What?” she finally called out. She set the sewing supplies on Martin’s desk. Then she walked into the bedroom and stood at the closed bathroom door. “What?” She held her breath; she hid the remaining two letters behind her back.
    “There’s a letter for Theo on my desk; could you post it on your way out?”
    “Okay…”
    “Thanks.”
    Marijke opened the door a crack. Steam filled the bathroom and moistened her face. She hesitated. “Martin-”
     
    “Hmm?”
    Her mind went blank. “
Tot ziens,
Martin,” she finally said.
    “
Tot ziens,
my love.” Martin’s voice was cheerful. “See you tonight.”
    Tears welled in her eyes. She walked slowly out of the bedroom, edged her way between the piles of plastic-wrapped boxes in the hall, ducked into the office, picked up Martin’s letter to Theo and continued through the front hall and out the door of their flat. Marijke stood with her hand on the doorknob. A random memory came to her:
We stood here together, my hand on the doorknob just like this. A younger hand; we were young. It was raining. We’d been grocery shopping.
Marijke closed her eyes and stood listening. The flat was large, and she couldn’t hear Martin from here. She left the door ajar (it was never locked) and put on her coat, checked her watch. She hefted her suitcases and carried them awkwardly down the stairs, glancing briefly at Elspeth’s door as she went by. When she came to the ground floor she left one of her envelopes in Robert’s mail basket.
    Marijke did not turn to look at Vautravers as she let herself out of the gate. She walked up the path to the street, rolling her suitcases behind her. It was a cold damp January morning; it had rained in the night. Highgate Village had a feeling of changelessness about it this morning, as though no time at all had passed since she’d arrived there, a young married woman, in 1981. The red phone box still stood in Pond Square, though there was no pond in Pond Square now, nor had there been for as long as Marijke could

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