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What Alice Forgot, Page 40

Liane Moriarty


  "Okay."

  Nick closed his eyes and fell immediately back asleep.

  Alice put her hands behind her head and considered her dream. Dominick had made an appearance because she'd seen him at the IGA yesterday. He was studying a packet of floss as if his life depended upon it. She had a feeling he'd seen her first and wasn't in the mood for one of their overly hearty, let's-pretend-this-isn't-awkward chats and so she'd obligingly darted into the next aisle.

  It was so strange to think that she'd seriously considered spending her life with him. (He was married now to one of the other mothers from school; he probably thought the same thing about her.) Madison had been asking Alice a lot of questions lately about the year they separated.

  "If you hadn't lost your memory that time, do you think you and Dad would have still got back together?" she'd asked just yesterday.

  It made Alice sick with guilt when she thought about what they had put the children through that year. She and Nick had been so young, so full of the earth-shattering importance of their own feelings.

  "Do you think we damaged you?" she asked Madison anxiously.

  "No need to get hysterical, Mum," Madison had sighed, worldly-wise.

  Would they have got back together if she hadn't lost her memory?

  Yes. No. Probably not.

  She remembered that hot summer's afternoon a few months after Francesca was born. Nick had stopped by the house to return a schoolbag Tom had left in his car. The children were out back, in the pool, and Alice, Dominick, and Nick were on the front lawn, reminiscing about their own childhood summers playing with water sprinklers on front lawns, before the days of water restrictions. Alice and Dominick were standing together, and Nick was standing a little way apart.

  The conversation had led to Alice and Nick telling Dominick about how they'd painted the front veranda on a sweltering hot day. It had been a disaster. The paint had dried too quickly; it had all cracked and peeled.

  "You were in such a bad mood that day," Nick said to Alice. "Stomping around. Blaming me." He imitated her stomping.

  Alice gave him a shove. "You were in a bad mood, too."

  "I poured a bucket of water over you to calm you down."

  "And then I threw the tin of paint at you and you went crazy. You were running after me. You looked like Frankenstein."

  They laughed at the memory. They couldn't stop laughing. Each time their eyes met they laughed harder.

  Dominick smiled uneasily. "Guess you had to be there."

  That just made them laugh harder.

  When they finally stopped and wiped the tears from their eyes, the shadows on the lawn had lengthened and Alice saw that she was standing next to Nick and Dominick was standing apart, as if she and Nick were the couple and Dominick was the visitor. She looked at Dominick and his eyes were flat and sad. They all knew. Maybe they'd all known for the last few months.

  Three weeks later, Nick moved back in.

  The funny thing was that Nick didn't even remember that moment on the lawn. He thought she imagined it. For him, the significant moment had been at Madison's oratory competition.

  "You turned around and looked at me and I thought, Yep, she wants me back."

  Alice didn't remember that at all.

  "What are you thinking about?"

  Alice blinked. Nick stood at the foot of the bed, looking down at her. "Your face has gone all serious."

  "Pancakes," said Alice. "I'm hoping they're seriously good pancakes."

  "Ah. Well, they will be. Madison is cooking."

  She watched him pull back the curtains and examine the day outside. He lifted the window and breathed in luxuriously. Obviously the weather had met with his approval. Then he went into the en suite bathroom, pulling up his T-shirt to scratch his stomach and yawning.

  Alice closed her eyes and remembered those first few months after Nick moved back in.

  Sometimes it was exhilaratingly easy to be happy again. Other times they found that they did have to "try," and the trying seemed stupid and pointless and Alice would wake up in the middle of the night thinking of all the times Nick had hurt her and wondering why she hadn't stayed with Dominick. But then there were the other times, unexpected quiet moments, where they'd catch each other's eyes, and all the years of hurt and joy, bad times and good times, seemed to fuse into a feeling that she knew was so much stronger, more complex and real, than any of those fledgling feelings for Dominick, or even the love she'd first felt for Nick in those early years.

  She had always thought that exquisitely happy time at the beginning of her relationship with Nick was the ultimate, the feeling they'd always be trying to replicate, to get back, but now she realized that was wrong. That was like comparing sparkling mineral water to French champagne. Early love is exciting and exhilarating. It's light and bubbly. Anyone can love like that. But love after three children, after a separation and a near-divorce, after you've hurt each other and forgiven each other, bored each other and surprised each other, after you've seen the worst and the best--well, that sort of a love is ineffable. It deserves its own word.

  And quite possibly she could have achieved that feeling with Dominick one day. It was never so much that Dominick was wrong for her and that Nick was right. She may have had a perfectly happy life with Dominick.

  But Nick was Nick. He knew what she meant when she said, "Oh my dosh." They could look at an old photo together and travel back in time to the same place; they could begin a million conversations with "Do you remember when ..."; they could hear the first chords of an old song on the radio and exchange glances that said everything without words. Each memory, good and bad, was another invisible thread that bound them together, even when they were foolishly thinking they could lead separate lives. It was as simple and complicated as that.

  When Olivia started high school, Alice had begun work as a consultant for fund-raising events. Working seemed to give her relationship with Nick a new edge. Sometimes they would go out to dinner after they'd both been working, and she felt an entirely new attraction for him. Two professionals flirting across the table. It had the frisson of an affair. It was so good to find that their relationship could keep on changing, finding new edges.

  Nick stopped suddenly beside the bed and looked down at her, his hand pressed to his chest.

  "What?" Alice sat upright. "Chest pain? Are you feeling chest pain?"

  She was obsessed with chest pain.

  He removed his hand and smiled. "Sorry. No. I was just thinking."

  "God," she said irritably, lying back down again. "You nearly gave me a heart attack."

  He knelt on the bed next to her. She swatted him away. "I haven't cleaned my teeth."

  "Oh, for heaven's sakes," he said. "I'm trying to say something profound."

  "I prefer you to be profound when I've cleaned my teeth."

  "I was just thinking," he said, "how grateful I am that you hit your head that day. Every day I say a little prayer thanking God for creating the spin class."

  She smiled. "That's very profound. Very romantic."

  "Thank you. I do my best."

  He lowered his head, and she went to give him a friendly, perfunctory kiss (she hadn't cleaned her teeth; she was impatient for her coffee) but the kiss turned unexpectedly lovely and she felt that ticklish, teary feeling behind her eyes as a lifetime of kisses filled her head: from the very first brand-new-boyfriend kiss, to "You may kiss the bride," to the unshaven, shell-shocked, red-eyed kiss after Madison was born, to that aching, beautiful kiss after she broke up with Dominick and told Nick (standing in the car park of McDonald's, the kids arguing in the backseat of the car), "Will you please come back home now?"

  The bedroom door burst open and Nick jumped back to his side of the bed, grinning. Madison was balancing a tray set for breakfast, Tom was holding a huge bunch of sunflowers, and Olivia had a present.

  "Happy Mother's Day to you," they sang, to the tune of "Happy Birthday."

  "We're trying to red
eem ourselves for last year," explained Madison as she placed the tray on Alice's lap.

  "I should think so," said Alice. She picked up the fork, took a mouthful of pancake, and closed her eyes.

  "Mmmmm."

  They would think she was savoring the taste (blueberries, cinnamon, cream--excellent), but she was actually savoring the whole morning, trying to catch it, pin it down, keep it safe before all those precious moments became yet another memory.

  Acknowledgments

  A special thank-you to my lovely sisters, Jaclyn and Nicola Moriarty, for reading and commenting on my first drafts.

  Thank you to my cousin, Penelope Lowe, for advice on medical matters, and my friend Rachel Gordon for patiently answering questions about life as a mother to school-aged children.

  Thank you to my U.S. agent, Faye Bender, for all her support in finding the right home for this book.

  Thank you to my wonderful editors around the world: Amy Einhorn in the United States, Cate Paterson and Julia Stiles in Australia, Melanie Blank-Schroeder in Germany, and Lydia Newhouse in the UK. You all helped make What Alice Forgot a better book.

  About the Author

  Liane Moriarty is the author of two novels, Three Wishes and The Last Anniversary, both of which were published around the world and translated into seven languages. She is also the author of the Nicola Berry series for children. Liane lives in Sydney with her husband and two small, noisy children.