Extract: Lucy by the Sea by Elizabeth Strout

This entry was posted on 11 November 2022.

Rich with empathy and emotion, Lucy by the Sea vividly captures the fear and struggles that come with isolation, as well as the hope, peace, and possibilities that those long, quiet days can inspire. At the heart of this story are the deep human connections that unite us even when we’re apart—the pain of a beloved daughter’s suffering, the emptiness that comes from the death of a loved one, the promise of a new friendship, and the comfort of an old, enduring love.

 


 

One

 

i

“Like many others, I did not see it coming.

 

But William is a scientist, and he saw it coming; he saw it

sooner than I did, is what I mean.

 

***

 

William is my first husband; we were married for twenty

years and we have been divorced for about that long as

well. We are friendly, I would see him intermittently; we

both were living in New York City, where we came when

we first married. But because my (second) husband had

died and his (third) wife had left him, I had seen him more

this past year.

About the time his third wife left him, William found out

that he had a half-sister in Maine; he found it out on an

ancestry website. He had always thought he was an only child,

so this was a tremendous surprise for him, and he asked

me to go up to Maine for two days with him to find her,

and we did, but the woman — her name is Lois Bubar—

Well, I met her but she did not want to meet William, and

this made him feel very terrible. Also, on that trip to

Maine we found out things about William’s mother that

absolutely dismayed him. They dismayed me as well.

His mother had come from unbelievable poverty, it

turned out, even worse than the circumstances I had come

from.

 

The point is that two months after our little trip to Maine,

William asked me to go to Grand Cayman with him, which

is where we had gone with his mother, Catherine, many,

many years before, and when our girls were small we would

go there with them and with her too. The day he came

over to my apartment to ask me to go with him to Grand

Cayman, he had shaved off his huge mustache and also cut

his full white hair very short — and only later did I realize

this must have been a result of Lois Bubar’s not wanting to

see him plus everything he had learned about his mother.

He was seventy-one years old then, but he, kind of, I think,

must have been plunged into some sort of midlife crisis, or

older man crisis, with the loss of his much younger wife

moving out and taking their ten- year- old daughter, and

then his half- sister’s not wanting to see him and his finding

out that his mother had not been who he’d thought

she had been.

 

So I did that: I went to Grand Cayman with him for three

days in early October.

 

And it was odd, but nice. We had separate rooms, and we

were kind to each other. William seemed more reticent

than usual, and it was strange for me to see him without

his mustache. But there were times when he threw his head

back and really laughed. There was a politeness to us that

was consistent; so it was a little strange, but nice.

 

But when we got back to New York, I missed him. And I

missed David, my second husband, who had died.

I really missed them both, David especially. My apartment

was so quiet!

 

***

 

I am a novelist and I had a book coming out that fall, and

so after our trip to Grand Cayman I had a great deal of

traveling to do around the country and I did it; this was in

late October. I was also scheduled to go to Italy and Germany

in the beginning of March, but in early December —

it was kind of odd — I just decided I was not going to go to

those places. I never cancel book tours and the publishers

were not happy, but I was not going to go. As March approached

someone said, “Good thing you didn’t go to

Italy, they’re having that virus.” And that’s when I noticed

it. I think that was the first time. I did not really think

about it ever coming to New York.

But William did.

 

ii

 

It turned out that the first week in March, William had

called our daughters, Chrissy and Becka, and asked —

begged — them to leave the city; they both lived in Brooklyn.

“And don’t tell your mother yet, but please do this. I

will deal with her.” And so they hadn’t told me. Which is

interesting because I feel that I am close to our girls, I

would have said closer to them than William is. But they

listened to him. Chrissy’s husband, Michael, who is in finance,
really listened, and he and Chrissy made arrangements

to go to Connecticut to stay in the house of

Michael’s parents — his parents were in Florida, so Chrissy

and Michael could stay in their house — but Becka balked,

saying that her husband did not want to leave the city.

Both girls said they wanted me to know what was going

on, and their father said to them, “I’ll take care of your

mother, I promise, but get out of the city now.”

 

A week later William called me and told me this, and I was

not frightened but I was confused. “They’re actually leaving?”

I said, meaning Chrissy and Michael, and William said

yes. “Everyone is going to be working from home soon,” he

said, and again I did not really understand it. He added,

“Michael has asthma, so he should be especially careful.”

I said, “He doesn’t have terrible asthma, though,” and

William paused and then said, “Okay, Lucy.”

 

Then he told me that his old friend Jerry had the virus and

was on a ventilator. Jerry’s wife also had the virus, but she

was at home. “Oh Pill, I’m so sorry!” I said, yet I still did

not get it, the importance of what was happening.

 

It’s odd how the mind does not take in anything until it

can.

 


“William called me that night and said, ‘Lucy, I’m picking you up tomorrow morning and we’re leaving.’”


 

The next day William called and said that Jerry had died.

“Lucy, let me get you out of this city. You’re not young,

and you’re scrawny and you never exercise. You’re at risk.

So let me pick you up and we’ll go.” He added, “Just for a

few weeks.”

“But what about Jerry’s funeral?” I asked.

William said, “There will be no funeral, Lucy. We’re in

a — a mess.”

Where out of the city?” I asked.

“Out of the city,” he said.

I told him I had appointments, I was supposed to see

my accountant, and I was supposed to get my hair done.

William said I should call my accountant and get an earlier

appointment and to cancel my hair and to be ready to

leave with him in two days.

 

I could not believe that Jerry had died. I mean that sincerely,

I could not believe it. I had not seen Jerry in many

years, and maybe that was why I was having trouble. But

that Jerry had died: I could not get it into my head. He

was one of the first people to die of the virus in New York

City; I did not know that at the time.

 

But I got an earlier appointment with my accountant, and

also for my hair, and when I went to my accountant’s office

I took the small elevator up: It always stops at every

floor, he is on the fifteenth floor, and people squeeze in

holding their paper coffee cups and then look down at

their shoes until they get off, floor by floor. My accountant

is a large, burly man, my age exactly, and we have always

loved each other; it may sound a little strange,

because we do not socialize, but he is one of my favorite

people in a way, he has been so deeply kind to me over

these many years. When I walked into his office he said

“Safe distance,” waving to me, and so I understood then

that we would not hug as we always do. He joked about

the virus, but I could tell he was nervous about it. When

we were through with our meeting he said, “Why don’t

you go down the freight elevator, I can show you where it

is. You’ll be alone on it.” I was surprised and I said, Oh

no, there was no need for that. He waited a moment, and

then he said, “Okay. Bye-bye, Lucy B,” blowing me kisses,

and I went down in the regular elevator to the street. “See

you at the end of the year,” I said to him; I remember saying

that. And then I took the subway downtown to get my

hair done.

 

I have never liked the woman who colors my hair — I had

adored the first woman who colored it for years, but she

moved to California — and the woman who took over, I

just never liked her. And I did not like her that day. She was

young and had a small child, and a new boyfriend, and I

understood that day that she did not like her child, she

was cold, and I thought: I am never coming back to you.

I do remember thinking that.

 

When I got home to my building I met a man in the elevator

who said he had just gone to the gym on the second

floor but the gym was closed. He seemed surprised about

this. “Because of the virus,” he said.

 

***

 

William called me that night and said, “Lucy, I’m picking

you up tomorrow morning and we’re leaving.”

It was a strange thing; I mean that I was not alarmed

but I was still kind of surprised at his insistence. “But

where are we going?” I asked.

And he said, “The coast of Maine.”

“Maine?” I said. “Are you kidding? We’re going back to

Maine?”

“I’ll explain,” he said. “Just please get yourself ready.”

I called the girls to tell them what their father had suggested,

and they both said “Just for a few weeks, Mom.”

Although Becka was not going anywhere. Her husband —

his name is Trey, and he is a poet — wanted to stay in

Brooklyn, and so she was going to stay with him.

 

iii

William showed up the next morning; he looked more like

he had years ago, his hair was growing out and his mustache

was coming back — it had been five months since he

had shaved it off — but it was not nearly what it had once

been, and he looked a little odd to me. I saw that on the

back of his head was a bald spot; his scalp was pink. And,

also, he seemed strange. He stood in my apartment with a

look of anxiety as though I was not moving fast enough.

He sat down on the couch and said, “Lucy, can we please

go now?” So I tossed a few clothes into my little violet-colored

suitcase and I left the dirty dishes from breakfast.

The woman who helps clean my apartment, Marie, was

coming the next day, and I don’t like to leave dirty dishes

for her, but William really wanted to get going. “Take your

passport,” he said. I turned and looked at him. “Why in the

world would I take my passport?” I asked. And he shrugged

and said, “Maybe we’ll go to Canada.” I went and got my

passport, and then I picked up my laptop and put it back

down. William said, “Take your computer, Lucy.”

But I said, “No, I don’t need it for only a couple of

weeks. The iPad will be fine.”

“I think you should take your computer,” he said. But I

did not.

William picked up the laptop and took it with him.

We went down in the elevator and I rolled my small

suitcase to his car. I was wearing my new spring coat that

I had recently bought. It was dark blue and black and the

girls had convinced me to get it the last time we were at

Bloomingdale’s, a few weeks before.

 

iv

Here is what I did not know that morning in March: I did

not know that I would never see my apartment again. I did

not know that one of my friends and a family member

would die of this virus. I did not know that my relationship

with my daughters would change in ways I could

never have anticipated. I did not know that my entire life

would become something new.

These are the things I did not know that morning in

March while I was walking to William’s car with my little

violet-colored rolling suitcase.”

 

Extracted from Lucy by the Sea by Elizabeth Strout, out now.

 

 

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