into a biddable, easier-to-cope-with Amanda. She took back the notebook and looked at it with a frown, as if not entirely sure where it had come from. Lisey thought, considering the obsessive nature of the numbers, that this might be a big step in a good direction.
Then Manda nodded as people do when they recall something that should not have been lost to mind in the first place. âIn the ones not circled, youâre at least named âLisa Landon, an actual person. Last of all, but hardly leastâconsidering what weâve always called you, thatâs almost a pun, isnât it?âyouâll see that a few of the numbers have squares around them. Those are pictures of you alone! â She gave Lisey an impressive, almost forbidding look. âYouâll want to have a look at them. â
âIâm sure.â Trying to sound thrilled out of her underpants when she was unable to think why sheâd have any slightest interest in pictures of herself alone during those all-too-brief years when sheâd had a manâa good man, a non-Incunk who knew how to strap it on âwith whom toshare her days and nights. She raised her eyes to the untidy heaps and foothills of periodicals, which came in every size and shape, imagining what it would be like to go through them stack by stack and one by one, sitting cross-legged on the floor of the memory nook (where else), hunting out those images of her and Scott. And in the ones that had made Amanda so angry she would always find herself walking a little behind him, looking up at him. If others were applauding, she would be applauding, too. Her face would be smooth, giving away little, showing nothing but polite attention. Her face said He does not bore me. Her face said He does not exalt me. Her face said I do not set myself on fire for him, nor he for me (the lie, the lie, the lie). Her face said Everything the same.
Amanda hated these pictures. She looked and saw her sister playing salt for the sirloin, setting for the stone. She saw her sister sometimes identified as Mrs. Landon, sometimes as Mrs. Scott Landon, and sometimesâoh, this was bitterânot identified at all. Demoted all the way to Gal Pal. To Amanda it must seem like a kind of murder.
âMandy-oh?â
Amanda looked at her. The light was cruel, and Lisey remembered with a real and total sense of shock that Manda would be sixty in the fall. Sixty! In that moment Lisey found herself thinking about the thing that had haunted her husband on so many sleepless nightsâthe thing the Woodbodys of the world would never know about, not if she had her way. Something with an endless mottled side, something seen best by cancer patients looking into tumblers from which all the painkiller had been emptied; there will be no more until morning.
Itâs very close, honey. I canât see it, but I hear it taking its meal.
Shut up, Scott, I donât know what youâre talking about.
âLisey?â Amanda asked. âDid you say something?â
âJust muttering under my breath.â She tried to smile.
âWere you talking to Scott?â
Lisey gave up trying to smile. âYes, I guess I was. Sometimes I still do. Crazy, huh?â
âI donât think so. Not if it works. I think crazy is what doesnât work. And I ought to know. Iâve had some experience. Right?â
âMandaââ
But Amanda had turned to look at the heaps of journals and annuals and student magazines. When she returned her gaze to Lisey, she was smiling uncertainly. âDid I do right, Lisey? I only wanted to do my part . . .â
Lisey took one of Amandaâs hands and squeezed it lightly. âYou did. What do you say we get out of here? Iâll flip you for the first shower.â
4
I was lost in the dark and you found me. I was hotâso hotâand you gave me ice.
Scottâs voice.
Lisey opened her eyes, thinking she had drifted away
Matthew Woodring Stover; George Lucas