The waiter’s tattoo said, “envy is ignorance.” I replied,
“No, it’s a deadly sin.” There wasn’t time to tell him the whole story, though
I’ve told it to my children so often that they can recite it from the first
line.
I was a quivering mass of insecurities in my 20s, eager to
please anyone who looked like the father who didn’t give a rat’s ass, kept from
an early grave by manic intelligence and an inborn capacity for locating the
closest emergency exit. I’d planned to marry at 27, and I did. To a good man,
as it turned out, a lawyer. He lived on Guam and so did I – both conditions
that wouldn’t endure but embracing impermanence wasn’t something I’d master for
a very long time. So those days seemed like forever.
Kate worked in “the” law firm. The one my husband joined.
She was many of the things – at the time I thought everything - that I wasn’t. Mostly the confidence she brought into
a room. It’s a confidence I have come to associate with prep school, that sense
that everyone’s looking at her and that’s as it should be. Yes, in retrospect
there was a certain, “preppiness” to her though at the time I just thought she
had things together. She did have most things well in hand: a matching husband
who knew how to work a room, two babies who knew not to cry, drool, or drip
snot in public, a house, real furniture bought undoubtedly new, silverware that
matched (something I’ve still not managed to achieve, and my scruffy old
beloved even thought she was smart.
The envy crept up on me. I was just curious at first,
sniffing around for the flaw, observing with disinterest the community’s
embrace. Expat lawyers have a built in radar for detecting their own. With me
the “blip blip” meant “foreign object approaching.” But she slipped underneath
into the welcoming smiles of senior and junior partners alike. She was, truly,
in. And as I realized that I was not and never would be the envy got its first
toe=hold. In time I couldn’t meet her smiling eyes. I’d say something banal
about the bouncing babies - “Oh
my, have her eyes changed color!” Remembering little old me, crying in the
bathroom stall when the inevitable drops of blood signaled failure of our meek
attempts at reproduction. That was probably the crux of the matter, though the
husband didn’t help. Charming and all, he never did remember my name.
Years passed. My own babies came. We moved away. Lacking
anything to draw us together with loads to push us apart, I forgot about Kate.
Rumors of her divorce trickled out from Guam, triggering a brief image of
perfection marred. She left the law firm, went out on her own to do divorce
work. Hers had been “acrimonious,” we heard, with a nasty custody dispute that
spun out for years. I couldn’t figure out why she wanted to keep revisiting
divorce. You’d think she’d have run like hell. As it turned out, she should
have.
Friday August 12, 1989 was the middle of Guam’s rainy
season. Clothes and shoes full of mildew, streets slippery with coral oil,
smells magnified by heat and moisture and nerves frayed knowing that it will go
on and on. Ever prompt, at 9AM Kate walked up the courthouse steps for the
fourth hearing in a custody dispute almost as ugly as her own. Turns out the
husband was waiting in a dark corner of the adjacent parking garage, smoking
cigarettes (several) with his new hunting rifle in hand. He was a good shot -
hit her right in the back of the head with a bullet that killed her instantly.
Kate’s children went to her husband and my green-eyed envy turned into guilt.
Guilt tinged with a hint of sadness. I’m not sure why. I
don’t really think I could have saved her – really. But she was suffering and I
missed it. Suffering’s a magnet for me, that’s why I went into social work. On
some naive level I think “trouble shared is trouble halved.” So yeah, if I
hadn’t been so busy cringing in the corner and feeling sorry for myself I might
have been able to help. I think
that.
Emerson to the contrary, envy is not ignorance. It’s a
deadly sin.