was going to have to call her. He took out his phone and dialedâin that moment he was glad that he had his meds on boardâand right away Kate picked up and hollered, âWhere are you? Iâm at the restaurant with Susan! Elliot is out parking the car. Did you go to your therapy ?â
âCould you not shout, Kate?â
âItâs goddamn packed in here!â
âI need to talk to you, privately,â he said, and turned away from the shopgirl. But there was no way, in the small space, to keep the girl from overhearing, so he put his hand over the phone, leaned toward her, and whispered, âIâll be right back,â then stepped out of the shop, stood on the sidewalk in the freezing wind, and slowly, deliberately humiliated himself, saying to Kate, âI stopped on my way home and bought you flowers, but the bank account isnât cooperating with my card for some reason and now Iâm stuck at the floristâs because I donât have enough cash on me, and I think the problem is simply thatâshit, I donât know what the problem is, I must not have kept my eye on the balance, and itâs possible that weâre overdrawn. I know weâve talked about this. But itâs not a serious problem, I promise.â
âOh, Jim. Are you spending ? How much have you spent ?â Kate cried, and he winced.
He said, âIs Susan there?â
âDo you not hear a word I say? Sheâs right here! Weâre drinking Manhattans. Are you coming? Weâre waiting for you. Why do you want to talk to Susan? Jim, are you spending our money?â
âI donât want to talk to Susan. Iâd just prefer that this conversation be private between the two of us.â
âPlease, Jim, as if everyone we know doesnât already know everything there is to know?â
âIâm notâI am not spending our money.â
âYouâre agitated.â
âWhy are you diagnosing me? Iâm not agitated. I wanted to surprise you with flowers. But clearly it was just another of my many mistakes. Iâll think twice next time. Everything I do is unwanted.â
âStop it,â Kate said to him then.
Through the phone he could hear sounds from the restaurant bar, voices and other noises in the after-work crush. Then the wind came up, and the only sound he heard was the phoneâs own static. The wind died, and Kateâs voice was saying, âElliot is here now, and Lorenzo is clearing us a table. Let me talk to someone about the flowers.â
In this way he was forced to trudge back into the shop, hold the phone out, and say to the girl, âShe wants to talk to you.â
The girl hesitated, then reached out and let him pass the phone into her hand.
âHello?â she said into his phone.
He retreated to a corner of the store. Joking aside, he didnât care to loiter about, smelling the flowers, while the girl wrote down his wifeâs American Express number. He would never learn the girlâs name, not now, Kate would see to that, he told himself as he peered out from his hiding place behind a leafy potted tree. He saw the shopâs buckets of flowers and the refrigerators in a row, and the door leading to the back, but where was the girl? He heard her laugh in response to some remark Kate mustâve made, and realized that she was standing behind the bouquet. âOh, donât I just know that about men and their important purchases!â she exclaimed.
What was Kate saying to her? Was he being made fun of? Was she calling him bipolar?
He had a problem with anxiety and suicidality, and, as Kate had reminded him in their conversation a moment earlier, everyone knew about his previous autumnâs sojourns on the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge and his games of chickenâno, not games, not at all, reallyâon the fire escape outside their bedroom window.
He didnât want to think about any of that. Yet it
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