had gone for his usual Saturday breakfast with his cronies, first dropping Savannah at Rachel’s so they could go…someplace; Savannah had told her, but Meg, distracted by the diaries and her ambivalence about reading them, had passed Savannah off to Brian and thought no more about her daughter’s plans.
The house was peaceful now, which made it easier to decide to try reading an entry or two. Just to prove to herself that the diaries were frivolous, that she could throw the whole lot away without regret.
She paged through, sampling the entries, surprisingly compelled to turn the pages. Even the shortest of her mother’s comments revealed pieces of her past—their past—she hadn’t seen before.
June 8, 1985
Meggie’s been hired on at the bank. We need her here, but we need her there, too. Or somewhere that pays good. The Lord knows the money will be useful! We had to let our health insurance lapse, so I just pray none of us takes sick. Blessed Mother, watch over us all.
So they’d gone without insurance; the very thought of it was frightening, even long after the fact. She remembered her mother’s pinched face from back then, the worry lines ringing her mouth and wrinkling her forehead. It hadn’t mattered how early Meg got up in the morning, her mother was always up before her. No matter how late she stayed up, her mother was still up too. Little wonder her mother’s blood pressure was high.
“June eighth…” she said. The day she met Brian.
Her first day of work at Hamilton Savings and Loan. Her training was set to begin at ten, but first she was required to meet her boss—Brian, who was the owner’s son, only six years older than herself. Belinda Cordero, head teller, led her to his office doorway and disappeared, leaving her feeling self-conscious and somehow wrong for this moment in time, as if she’d been dropped into the scene by mistake. Her real life was waiting in the paddocks—horses that needed to be exercised, tack that awaited repair. She wanted to bolt.
Brian was sitting at a desk that looked older and more distinguished than
he
was. He wore an off-white linen jacket and a pastel pink shirt, a là Sonny Crockett from
Miami Vice.
His hair was longish and styled just right, meant to dazzle all the women and show the men he was on top of the trends.
He sat back and waved her in. “Hi, come on in, Meg. I’m Brian Hamilton.”
She took three small steps and stopped. His office smelled of old leather and young ambition, embodied by an expensive cologne she would forever associate with him. She took one more step and stopped.
Brian folded his hands behind his head. “Welcome. We’re glad to have you as part of the Hamilton team. Eileen tells me you’re a rising senior at North Marion High?”
“That’s right.”
“Good in math?”
She nodded. She did her best to keep eye contact, the way her father had told her she should, but it was hard. Brian kept smiling at her as if he knew that her black polyester skirt and ruffled brown blouse came from a thrift shop. Her shoes, too—though she hoped he couldn’t see them while she stood there in front of his desk. It was the same outfit she’d worn for her interview the week before, and she suspected Eileen Guillen had told him everything.
She’d gotten the job out of sympathy, she was sure. Everyone in Ocala seemed to know how tenuous things were for the Powells; her father broadcasted his failures as loudly as his successes, afternoons at the co-op. She had applied for a position with the janitorial staff, the job advertised in the
Ocala Star-Banner
, but during her interview with Eileen Guillen, director of human resources, she’d talked about her plan to study accounting after she graduated. Because of that, instead of cleaning floors and toilets in the historic building that Adair Hamilton had rebuilt right after the 1883 fire, Meg would become a part-time teller. “We like to give our people the best possible start,”