The Comfort of Watching
Mara liked the quality of the light in the afternoon. It came in low and gold through the living room window, falling across the hardwood floor in long, warm rectangles. She was sitting in her usual spot on the couch, a book open in her lap that she wasn't really reading, watching the dust motes dance. Her phone buzzed on the coffee table. She glanced at the screen. Hey! Drinks at The Painted Lady at 7. Sarah will be there. You should come! Mara read the message three times. She pictured The Painted Lady: the sticky floors, the too-loud music, the way you had to lean in and shout to be heard. She pictured Sarah, who would look great and have a new job and ask polite questions that required Mara to summarize her stagnant life in a neat little paragraph. Her thumb hovered over the keyboard. Sounds fun! Can't tonight, though. Rain check? It was her standard reply. Polite. Placating. It created a little bubble of future possibility that everyone knew would never be popped. She set...