PROLOGUE
May 14, 1985
The Trina A. Sherman
Dance Studio
Some call the way
I use my body a gift. I call it a means
to survive. I’m hidden behind a thick, rippled
curtain, the smell of dust familiar, like the rapid beating of my heart. One would think that twelve years of dance
training would quell the jitters. Not
quite.
I’ve fallen asleep
to the steps, but it’s too late to piece them together in my mind. Instead, I engage in a pre-dance ritual. I tap my chest exactly two times then hold my
fingers there, a reminder of where the dance begins. I’ve been told to follow my heart. Haven’t we all? It’s a bad cliché with a really good premise,
I think.
I close my eyes
and my grandmother’s face reaches me. Quiet yourself to your own beat, Felicia. In
about three seconds, the music will pass through me like fire on wood. Three,
two, one. The curtain slides open,
and the spotlight bears down on my graceful dancer’s pose; thighs crossed, toes
pointed. My fingers rest elegantly on stage,
insects atop a lake.
A long-sleeved
white dress—fitted at the waist and cut to expose the small muscles of my back—clings
to a petite body. My waist length dark
hair is held back in a beaded silver headband.
Though I can’t see
them yet, I feel the intent presence of my audience. There is a cough, paper rustle, and a low
murmur before the spotlight, my halo, crowns me. The crowd quiets itself to an unbearable
silence, as the first beat of music plays.
Something in the way she moves. A slow head circle…
Attracts me like no other lover. Toe pointed, my turned-out leg fans open
in an elegant ninety-degree arc. My body
rises.
Something in the way she woos me…
Walk… walk…
arabeseque.
I don’t want to leave her now—my hands, like
birds—You know I believe in how.
The melody moans forward,
moving me to stage right, where I slide into a slow and sensuous split. Something
in the way she smiles. And all I have to
do is think of her. Something in the way she smiles for me. I don’t want to leave her now. You know I believe in how.
I sail through the
lyrics, my body winsome, as though at the mercy of changing winds, despite the
truth—every one of these moves has been artfully planned. I rise, fall, and collapse; no longer aware
of my rapid heartbeat, of the sea of faces before me.
The tempo
quickens.
You’re asking me, will my love grow… I don’t
know, no I don’t know. Just stick around
and it may show…
I walk, leap, and pique-turn
through lyrics that tell a story of longing.
I’m only fifteen but when I dance I feel older, wiser.
You know I believe in how…
I have my mother’s
olive Greek skin and my father’s light green eyes. I’m used to having all eyes on me. I seduce my
audience when I dance. And they do the
same for me.
Chapter One
Twenty years later
I have locked
myself in the bathroom. I would like to
say that this is for a noble reason, a clever means to hide away from the burglars
stalking my home while I notify the police to capture a pair of wanted
criminals; or that I’m a novelist who practices the eccentric writing practice
of bathroom meditation in order to find
my voice. My reason, truth be told, is
less remarkable.
My three-year-old
daughter, Maggie, is having one of her tantrums. The terrible
twos, I’ll have you know, are a breeze compared to the threes. I watch the
doorknob spin clockwise and counterclockwise, as though possessed by my little
girl’s temper.
“Let me in right
this second!” she wails, her crisp diction seemingly advanced for the not-so-cute
behavior that has lasted about an hour now.
Prior to the current lock-down method, I have implemented a variety of
behavioral strategies, including the
use of a patient voice (didn’t last), offering a positive incentive (didn’t
work) and, finally, the empty threat (didn’t hold).
Together, my
daughter and I have burned through a few hours of daylight so that I might establish
follow-through and actually mean what I say. I’m shooting for long-term results here. My daughter will pass through this naughty
egocentric phase with grace. She will
realize by the time she enters kindergarten that she’s not the center of the
universe.
The doorknob
clatters madly. “Oh Pen Up FELICIA!!” Her scream is feverish and desperate, as is the
choice to address me by first name. I toss a toxic scented paper towel into the
basket, close my eyes, and rub my lids, as though I can somehow erase exhaustion.
Maggie never
learned how to sleep through the night.
She sleeps in the center of a king-sized mattress betrayed by a small
body that’s surprisingly voluminous. In lieu of REM sleep, I mentally
redecorate my home, Maggie’s foot tucked in the nook between my neck and
jawline. Derek and I don’t try to sugar
coat the situation with chic labels tossed around in our suburban circles. The Family Bed. Interconnectedness. We are not a married couple who thrives in
skin-to-skin contact, like some of our European ancestors. There is nothing cohesive about dysfunctional
sleep habits. The truth is, our situation
has arrived by default of my unwillingness
to ferberize our child (your screaming infant will eventually self-sooth!—says
Dr. Ferber) and his, to go to work tired.
The resolve? I take one for the team, and end up
sleep-deprived and bitchy, a complement to my well-rested husband. Sorry.
That was unfair. It actually is
quite hard to function on lack of sleep and I don’t wish this on anyone, let alone
the financial backbone of our family.
I’m what you call privileged,
and although I don’t love the term, there’s something fair about it. I don’t have a coffee-breathing boss
directing the traffic of my day. I don’t
worry about how a thick stack of bills will be paid, and I shop for curtains
regularly. As others have pointed out, I’m lucky that I
don’t have to work outside of the home.
The lower part of
the door vibrates, though the doorknob has stilled, credit to Maggie’s new position
on the floor, where she carries on with a ragged cry. The vibration of my washing machine has come
to a halt. I take another minute to load
up the dryer with damp Downy fresh clothes.
I’m making efficient use of my time-out.
This strategy, call it harsh, has been documented in a variety of must-read
parenting books. It’s not my daughter that I’m ignoring right now,
it’s my daughter’s behavior, and
knowing the distinction is what sets apart informed
and uninformed parents.
“My heart hurts!”
she wails.
The
strong-willed child may be looking for a way to manipulate you, push your
buttons. Don’t resort to yelling or
losing your temper! Remember: You are the adult. Find a peaceful place to fill your patience
cup. Ignore negative behavior.
It has,
admittedly, taken me more than a few months and classes to ignore my daughter’s
wounded heart in order to fill my patience cup.
Am I being a loser parent? What
kind of mother ignores the needs of her own child? Will Maggie be the adult who bucks intimacy
later in life? Guilt pecks its way down
my spine.
“Raise your hand
if you’ve somehow felt guilty over the last forty-eight hours.” Dr. Elena Goodrall, the acclaimed early
childhood educator whose Wednesday night workshop was packed, had instructed a group
of Moms and, more appreciatively, the pair of Dads.
They were a young
unmarried couple, parents of the adopted Chinese baby, Nia, who sat cradled beneath
layers of blanket in her travel car seat.
Her name, of Gaelic origin, means radiance,
the doting Dads shared with us, taking turns holding out fingers for the baby
to squeeze.
I bought
Goodrall’s book, Parenting with Pride,
in hopes of becoming a proud parent, not the worn-out shell of a person I feel
like now. I take in a deep breath. My bathroom time is up. The dryer hums in oblivion. The cheetah photo mocks me from its perch
above the toilet. Freedom is Knowing Your Own Spots.
I knock first so
that she can move away from the door’s back.
“I’m coming out now, Maggie. I’m
sorry that you’re upset but I’m not changing my mind about the sandals. It’s still too cold to wear them outside. You can wear your white sneakers or your
black dress shoes instead.”
I hear her shuffle
back amidst tears and open the door. Her
straight brown hair sticks to her cheeks when she says this to me. “I want to wear the sandals. You’re a dumb bitch.”
This, from my three-year-old. My neck stiffens. A pain moves down my
throat like thick black oil. You would
think the curse would send me to fury, to the nearest bar of soap that I’d cram
into her mouth, just like in the old days.
Instead, I stand
paralyzed, my mouth dropped open as the realization sinks into my skin like a
sunburn. What has been said isn’t
something you read about in textbooks, or discuss in parenting classes. I close my eyes and swallow a mound of guilt
because (indirectly) I'm to blame, a catalyst to a problem that isn’t talked
about so much.
I kneel down so that I’m
level with her height and pull a strand of sticky hair from her face. “Mags… what you said is very, very bad and,
no matter how angry you are, you cannot use those words again.” I hug her tightly until she loosens from my grip to face me,
her moist green eyes prepared to tell the truth. She's about to confess where
she heard the phrase but I already know and, right now, I can't bear to hear my
little girl mouth the origin.
I bite my lip.
Chapter Two
I am seated
amongst Derek’s work friends at Anthony’s Pier 4, a Boston restaurant known for
seafood and a delicious view of the harbor. The ocean view from our vantage point is
stunning, the sun bobbling at the horizon, plump as a pumpkin, and casting a
stretch of luminous peach light over a calm sea. I imagine painting this scene
with oils, my brush held acutely in a relaxed hand.
We are here to
celebrate Bill’s birthday and, more silently, his new title. The corpulent colleague has recently become Partner
at Fiske, Jones, and Waterhouse, the robust accounting firm to which Derek is
employed. It pays to be friends with
people like Bill.
After a bit of
negotiating (Patty only drinks white; Rick is into Chilean these days) Derek
orders a few bottles of wine for the table. “We’re going to go with a bottle of
the Chardonnay and, also, the Adobe,” he points out to Alim, a patient waiter
who has agreed to take care of us for the
evening.
“Certainly. I’ll be right back with those.”
Bill’s wife, Patty,
is seated to my right, decked in a turquoise silk scarf and gold hoop
earrings. Her cologne is potent yet
delightful in its own Patty sort of way.
My brother, a language buff, would call it Patty-esque. “How do you like Derek’s new Audi?” she asks
me. “I saw it in the parking lot. Pretty sharp.”
“Oh, it’s a great
car,” I say back truthfully. “So many
cool features and you can’t beat the ride.”
Rick,
the eldest of our clan, glides into the conversation. “Wait ‘til you try her
out on the highway. Engine’s a rocket.”
His thin hair is greased back, its deep chestnut shade warranting suspicion.
“I already have,”
Derek affirms, “and the pick-up is pretty damn good.” He wears his proud boyish face, my husband of
ten years. It’s the same face I once fell
in love with on South Beach, Newport. I
was twenty-two, five years younger than the lean sunburned man seated on a
beach chair beside my blanket. He was blonder
then, his legs crossed at the ankles, a thick novel folded open in his hands. His eyes had risen over the pages to find me
on all fours, hunched over a sandcastle.
The sight of my
sandy ass was Derek’s first view of me.
It has taken me a number of years to get over this. Not that there’s anything wrong with my
ass. It’s just not the presentation I
would have gone for, had I known we’d end up married three years later. “It looks good,” he had said, in reference to
the castle.
He wears that same
expression now, though the confidence in his eyes runs deeper. His wheels truly are a symbol of status, a
fine expression of what he has accomplished, and a good reason to feel
comfortable in this circle.
“What dealership
did you go through?” Bill asks.
“Danvers Road. Their service is unbelievable,” Derek
answers, his passion for his vehicle evident in the inflection of the last word
spoken. He emphasizes the un syllable, selling all of us on the
dealership. “They wash and vacuum your
car after each oil change,” he goes on.
I nod with
interest, though my mind wanders to the lime green cloth. I envision my husband
bent over the car’s hood, wiping down invisible spots with this cloth, his back
muscles tight and elongated. Its color
is exquisite, the tropical green of a tree frog, and it’s stored in a bin that
fits nicely in a small compartment of the Audi’s trunk, along with several
others. He guards his cloths
fervently. I was once scolded for a
failed attempt to borrow the frog cloth—“They bring you coffee and donuts while
you’re waiting,” I hear him say now.
Mary,
wife of Rick, changes the subject. “Anyone
in for a few platters of littlenecks? Listen
to this…” She adjusts her reading glasses, “served raw with cocktail sauce and
scallion-lime-ginger sauce. Not bad for
the price,” she adds, peeking over her specs at Bill.
“Fine
by me,” Bill says. “Is everyone alright with that?”
“Sounds excellent. Order up,” Derek answers while the rest of us
nod in agreement.
Alim is back with our
two bottles of wine, along with an opener.
“Have you folks decided on an appetizer?” He works at the corkscrew with a deft hand.
“Actually, we have,” Bill says. “We’d like to order a few platters of the
littlenecks, the ones with the—” A spiraling finger hints at his loss for
words.
“Lime ginger
sauce,” Mary finishes.
“Thank you. Senior moment?” The joke goes over well. We let out a collective chuckle.
“Great
choice. I will put those right in,” Alim
says, pouring a taste of wine into Bills goblet before rounding our table. “Let me tell you about our specials for tonight,”
he says, turning the bottleneck to avoid an unnecessary drip over Rick’s glass.
“Tonight we have a seafood diavolo served over pasta with cherry tomatoes,” he
begins, “an almond encrusted salmon served with a lemon cream sauce, a filet
served with portobella mushrooms and ojou sauce, and a baked halibut served
with a crumbly layer of parmesan and garlic.” His hands, by now, are behind his
waist.
I’ve always been
fascinated by a waiter’s competence in delivering menu options by memory. He makes the process seem natural, though one
senses that he simply makes it look
that way, as would a figure skater executing a demanding routine on the ice. I wonder if Alim rehearses the specials in the
kitchen, along with the more challenging list of individual orders. He must have to practice in the closed stall
of a bathroom, away from kitchen cacophony, I decide, placing him there in my
mind. Tonight we have a variety of gourmet seafood dishes—
Bill’s sturdy voice pulls me back. “Those sound lovely. Thank you so much.” He winks. His professional smile says even more. Time is
up for you, Alim.
The waiter humbly
takes the cue—“I’ll be right back with your appetizer”—but not before holding
my gaze a few beats too long. Mary
notices.
“Someone’s been smitten
I think,” she says, her tone mischievous.
I take a generous sip
of wine. “Oh gosh, I don’t think so…”
“Was there ever a
man not smitten by Felicia?” Patty adds warmly. “Look at her.” She lifts a demonstrative hand.
“Yeah. How does it feel to be married to such a hot
mama?” Rick asks my husband, grinning like an alligator.
I choose to dismiss
the comment, tugging unnecessarily at an earring back while Derek dips a hunk
of bread into a bowl of seasoned olive oil.
He chews quickly, wants to change the subject. My looks are redundant,
boring. There are more important things
to talk about. I save him the trouble
because a part of me agrees.
“Actually, I was
just thinking about how well Alim remembered all of those dishes,” I say. “I’ve always been fascinated with the
smoothness of a really good waiter, know what I mean?”
“They train ‘em
young in the Middle East,” a relentless Rick says.
“You are fresh,”
Mary chides, saving her husband of over twenty-five years. Mary knows Rick better than any of us. Sarcasm is just his way. Still, the word fresh seems out of place. Fresh is a word better suited to
describe, perhaps, a young boy poking his sister at church. Rick is a grown man.
“Should we order
more rolls?” Derek asks.
Jackass would have been a better word. “Great idea, honey,” I say.
We spend the next
half-hour chatting about our kids and passing around clams. We demolish both bottles of wine. Mary orders
more. The white linen tablecloth has
been christened with spots of olive oil.
We’re notably relaxed now, the wine having lifted our spirits. The sundry aroma of garlic and seafood pass
insatiably through the dining area, elevating conversation.
“Did you see that
hit last night?” Derek sparks up a baseball conversation. “Two strikes on him, and he drives one
through center field.”
“Bases were
loaded, too,” Mary adds.
We sail through
topics easily. Alim serves our entrees
amidst a new discussion about pool furniture.
We take turns bragging about the presentation of each other’s dishes. I can see that Derek is proud of my
interaction with his colleagues now. He
rubs my back. After an awkward start, I’ve
adjusted nicely to the group. I know how
to play this game, his game.
Then something in
the tightness of Bill’s jaw tells me that a more serious subject is about to
surface. He uses a napkin to wipe the
corner of his mouth. Then his eyes
settle dangerously on me. “So, Derek tells me you have a Fine Arts
degree from Boston’s Suffolk University.”
I swallow a creamy
wedge of salmon. “Actually, I’m a few
classes shy of attaining the degree.”
“You only missed
like what, one class? That’ll be easy
to finish,” Derek says, an attempt to refurbish my dusty academic past.
“Well, there’s
more than a few,” I say back truthfully.
Bill wants more. I
can sense his energy, the critical edge of his questions as he uses a fork to
pry open the stubborn mouth of a clam. “When
I became pregnant with Andre… my son,” I go on, “I was only twenty. So I had to take care of him.” I don’t have to look at Derek. His thoughts burn through me. Don’t
tell all. There’s no need to tell him everything. “So it made it difficult to attend classes
at that time,” I conclude, finding a cold glass of water in my hands.
“Raising kids is a full time job,” Patty
affirms, an unsteady wine glass lifted.
“I went back to work when my kids were young in order to save my sanity!”
“Well, I can
certainly understand that,” I say, hedging a pile of rice onto my fork. “Kids offer us a unique set of challenges
and they certainly don’t make our choices easy,” I add, my eyes settling on no
one. “But, honestly, I have no regrets. I guess my children have served a higher
purpose for me.”
Bill regards me
with suspicion; his head tilted thoughtfully, the blade of his knife buried in his
beef. “Well said. You’re still a young woman, though. Opportunity is at your fingertips.” His grey eyes bore through me. “You can always go back, right?”
I know what I’m
supposed to say now. I’m supposed to assure
the firm’s lead that I plan to go back and finish my degree. Of course I will. After that, I may even pursue higher education
for a Masters in Art. Hell, maybe I’ll
just plunge ahead and go for the Ph.D.
At my age, my goals ought to be defined and noteworthy. Derek Norton, an aspiring partner, would
settle for nothing less from his pretty other half.
“Actually, if I
carve out any time away from my kids, it will probably be to dance,” I say back
instead. “That’s always been my first
artistic passion.”
Bill’s unrest is
palpable, as is my husband’s disappointment in me. The comment was a risk and I
took it Maybe it was the wine. Or maybe it was simply the truth, rising up
and out of me like black smoke, an omen of some sort. In any event, the car ride home is going to be
ugly.
I could use a cigarette.
Chapter Three
The spring sun
casts a radiant haze over the baseball field as day fades to night. The game ended in a loss that should have
been a win, the score tied up until an opponent shot a line drive straight down
the third base line. The coach argued
vehemently with the umpire, insisting on a foul ball call.
It’s only a game,
I tell myself now, though a part of me feels sucked in by the game’s
emotion—the celebratory high fives of the opposing team after a hitting rally,
discriminated by the hopeless hand gestures of our team’s players.
I key myself into
the Explorer and my engine roars to life.
Groups of wan-faced players saunter off the field, bat bags slung over
shoulders, white pants smeared with dirt.
Before long, Andre’s eyes find mine through the windshield glass. I wave unnecessarily and flash him a cheery
smile, as though oblivious to the game’s tragic turn. Then I pop open the
trunk, and he unloads a hefty bag before climbing into the passenger side.
“Hey. Chin up.
You guys will get em’ next time.”
In lieu of a
response, he leans back and stretches a seatbelt across his torso. His length still takes me by surprise. I have to remind myself that the pudgy gum
chewing kid of six months ago is still beside me, despite a sudden growth
spurt.
“You had a great
hit last inning.” I back out of a tight
spot.
“Mom, how many
times have I told you—” He takes off his hat, runs his fingers through a sweaty
head.
“Alright, I get
it.” I flex an understanding hand. “It’s
not considered a hit if an out is produced from it. I know.
So I guess you just got robbed.”
“I didn’t get
robbed, Mom,” he says, exasperated. “I
hit the ball straight into the glove of the center fielder.”
“So it was a hit
then. You still hit the ball! It’s not
like you whiffed or anything.”
He plays with my
radio knobs.
“Well, no one
really had any great hits today.” I make
a left turn.
“Tons of people
got hits, Mom.” He counts them out on
his fingers. “Bradley got a hit. Richie got a hit. Steve got a hit.”
“Well. They’re all ugly,” I say back, finding the
main road.
“Seriously, Mom?”
“Alright, I’m sorry. That was mean. God forgive me. But you are the best looking
kid on that team.”
He finds a song. “What an asset.”
I point an index
finger at him. “Your looks will open
doors for you, trust me. It shouldn’t be
that way, but it is. Society is drawn to
attractive people. But, more
importantly,” I lecture on, “you have to be thankful for your health. Look at Jaime Waters. He’d give anything to get out of that
wheelchair and just walk. Just take one
step.”
A pause simmers
between us as we consider the child’s horrid fate. Two years ago, a car struck the young bike
rider on a back road in town. That I have exploited him now, after a bad ball
game, feels fundamentally wrong.
“I know. That was awful.” Pity
distorts the mouth of my teenager, making the comment more bearable. “What’s for dinner?”
“I haven’t gotten
that far yet. Gram came over to watch
your sister today while I grocery shopped.
I was thinking of throwing some burgers on the grill and making a salad. Sound good?”
“Yeah. Derek working late tonight?”
Hearing my son
call the only father he’s ever known by his first name still stings. Andre was five when we got married but he had
known him for three years prior, during our dating phase. Derek had adjusted charmingly to my single
mom status, lavishing Andre with expensive birthday gifts and surprising us
with impromptu vacations throughout the year.
There were less charming nights, too—nights when Derek
would help tuck Andre into bed before initiating explicit sex with me in the adjacent
bathroom. There, he’d lift me onto the
vanity counter, push up my waitress skirt, and enter me with ravenous need. When I moaned, he’d feed me his fingers. When I came, he’d hold my head against his
chest and play with my hair.
It was a euphoric
time, during which I questioned nothing.
I didn’t seek to analyze the few erotic photos he had snapped of me on
occasion, or wonder how it was possible for one man to crave so much sex. I was a dancer, at ease with my body and
enjoying every performance produced
by it, so to speak. Derek was older, and
so very successful. He desired me. I delivered.
It was that simple. The small
pornography file secretly stored (and later discovered) on his laptop didn’t
bother me. All guys window shop for naked women.
It’s just what they do, I told myself.
It took only a few
years for us to reach the same conclusion.
Our relationship was strong enough for marriage. It was the next logical step and we both agreed
to it easily. He hid the princess cut
diamond ring in the toe of one of my pointe shoes. Andre caressed the stone’s
surface when I showed it to him later that day.
“It looks like a sparkly light bulb.”
I had to agree. We munched on
peanuts and chatted about my upcoming marriage.
“What does he feel
like to you?” Derek isn’t Andre’s biological father. I didn’t want to force-feed him a Dad yet—given
the fact that he didn’t know his own—I figured he’d confess that Derek feels
like a daddy.
“He feels like a
Derek to me,” is what came out instead.
“He is working late,” I answer him now,
feeling cheated by the loss of nine years.
My life was different back then, not necessarily better, just different,
like a new car smell. We were a freshly
minted couple with enormous plans to buy a home, furnish it, and massage our careers.
“The firm just
took on a new client, so I imagine he’ll be on the late side all week. What do you have for homework?”
“Just stuff.”
“How is that Power
Point presentation coming along?”
“Good.”
“Grades close this
Friday, right?”
“Yeah.”
The drive home
stays the same. I fire out questions,
and Andre fields them with the enthusiasm of a bored plane passenger. Lush spring landscapes unfold before us. Ripe lawns mottled with red-hot tulips contrast
the more elegant shades of earlier buds, the weeping cherries and snowflake
perennials, pale as wedding cake frosting.
“Mom!”
“Ooh, sorry.” I clutch the wheel and jerk it back over the
curb. “I was admiring the flowers. Thank goodness for strong tires.” I readjust my rearview mirror.
He shakes his head
and I catch a forbidden smile. “Good
thing Derek’s not with us. He hates your
driving.”
“So true,” I say
back. “He’s getting better though, no?”
“Depends on what
you mean by better.”
I sigh. “Hmm.
Guess you have a point there.”
We pass a dog
walker, followed by a bony runner dressed in a neon orange vest and spandex
pants. Her arms, bent at perfect right
angles, swing at a good clip.
“Don’t’ take her
out, Mom.”
I slide a snake-eyed
glance toward him. “Be nice.”
Before long, I
turn into our neighborhood and drive around the semicircle leading to an extravagant
home, painted China Doll beige. I still
can’t believe I own it. It’s boxy and interesting;
with palladium windows and a stately door that’s painted a luxurious red. Three of my childhood homes would have fit
inside this one.
Our driveway, more
simply, is distinguished by sidewalk chalk graffiti. I drive tentatively over stick figures, dogs,
and suns, as though my tires may crush the many personalities. There are overly happy suns, angry dogs, and
sad babies. Evidence of time well spent
in the day and life of a three-year-old, I decide, adjusting my steering to
squeeze into my side of the garage. “Mind
taking in a few groceries?”
Andre agrees. The two of us haul handfuls of groceries up the
small set of stairs leading to the kitchen. I turn the knob and push it open with my body
weight. My daughter, immediately present,
greets us with enthusiasm.
“Look, Mom!
Pinchers likes my birthday cake!”
“Oh, honey, I don’t think that’s such a good
idea.” I place the bags down on the
floor and rush to the table. Pinchers is a guinea pig. The birthday cake is made of clay. The math is not promising here. “Let’s put Pinchers back in his cage.” I grab the rodent from his nervous crawl
along the kitchen table, and cradle his bottom.
“I think this clay may make him sick.”
“Gosh, I was
surprised he actually eats the stuff!
I’ve never seen a guinea pig do that before.” Whether
or not my mother, Elena Krikorian, has witnessed a clay- eating rodent before
is irrelevant. As doting Grandma, she
simply can’t say no to my daughter, I’ve learned.
I stuff him into
an odorous cage and latch the door shut.
“Well, I think it’s non-toxic, but we may as well cut our losses with
this little guy. His poop is enough of a
hassle.” The guinea pig was offered to Maggie as a reward for good
behavior. On the day we brought him
home, Andre held the animal above his face and sung a rendition of Beyonce—It sucks to be you right now—to which I feebly
assured him that Maggie understands her caretaking responsibilities.
“Thank you for
taking care of Maggie, Mom. How was your time?”
I draw packages of lunchmeat and cheese from one of the bags and stack
them in a refrigerator drawer.
“Oh, we had a
ball… Didn’t we, sweetheart?” I hear her say, my head in the fridge.
“Next week Grammy
is taking me shopping!”
I secure a few condiments
onto a high shelf and back out from the frigid air. “Oh?” My
daughter is dressed in an authentic Snow White gown, ruby slippers, and a silver
Cinderella crown. A shopping spree is,
quite possibly, the last thing she needs.
“Well, nothing
big… I was just going to take her out to buy some gum,” Gram says, winking at
Andre. “How was your game, honey?”
“I thought we were
going to the toy store, too, Grammy,” Maggie corrects, refusing the white lie.
“Well, we can probably
stop there, too,” Gram concedes.
“But you said!”
“Grammy will
decide on the day she comes over,” I say, hoping the firm tone will suffice.
“The game was good,” Andre cuts in, pouring
himself a tall glass of milk.
“Strike anyone
out?”
“I don’t pitch every
game, Gram. Today I played third.”
“Ahh, good
position,” she says, then winks at me. “God
is he getting tall.” Her Greek nose,
hooked tastefully at its tip, suits her warm smile.
“Can you make clay
cupcakes with me?” Maggie pleads.
“I will, honey. Just give me a minute to throw some burgers
on the grill.” I stack canned goods, puncture the beef package, and season the
burgers before setting them down on a plate.
My mom fishes through her purse for her keys. “Ooh, geez.
Seven-thirty already. I’m going
to head out now.” She approaches her
grandchildren, plants a kiss on each of their heads.
“Thanks for everything, Mom. I’ll talk to you soon.” I rinse my hands, dry
them, and walk her to the front door. “Maggie
take a nap today?” I whisper.
“She did.” She tugs at my shirt as though to share an
inside joke. “Slept for almost two hours
on the couch.”
“Nice. Makes my life easier.”
“Ooh, almost forgot to remind you,” she adds,
a small hand on the doorknob, “the adult ballet class I was telling you about
is being held on Thursday nights. Fran says they may be hiring teachers.”
I touch her
forearm. “Oh, thanks for letting me
know, Mom. I want to look into
that. Thursday night,” I chant,
committing the day to memory. “Call you
soon.”
“Bye Gram.” Andre tosses my mom a glance on his way up
the stairs, taking two steps at a time
“Bye,
sweetheart.”
Through the
sidelight window glass, I watch my mother amble to her car. She is wearing linen culottes and flat silver
sandals. Her steps are deliberate,
though not watchful enough to be considered elderly. She’s a young sixty. Her silken black hair falls in flat layers
that frame a dark skinned face. As
though dipping a toe into the ocean, she enters her vehicle slowly then closes
the door. Backstage. Mom slides brown
bobby pins into my dolled-up hair. My next dance is going to be tough, with lots
of gymnastics. She fastens one more pin to create another loose
curl in the back.. “Careful driving,
Mom.” I whisper. A lump swells up in my chest.
* * *
“Good day?” Derek has
arrived home. He uses the straight edge
of one hand to swipe crumbs of clay off the table’s edge, collecting them with a
receiving palm.
“Yeah, busy as
usual,” I say back, loading the dishwasher.
“Andre lost his game. He was so
disappointed… Felt bad for him.”
“Hmm.” He tosses a
few cookie cutters into Maggie’s plastic bin.
“Gosh, this stuff gets everywhere.” Did your mother come over to help
today?”
I drop
a few forks into a crowded utensil compartment.
“She did and she was a huge help,” I say back.
“Oh.” He uses pincher fingers to tweeze crumbs from
the dimples of a threadbare chair pad. “Just
saying, we don’t have the extra money to replace these.”
“And I don’t have the
extra energy to perfect everything we own, Derek. Have you spent a full day with Maggie lately?”
His athletic hands
ball together grocery bags, of which he compresses into an overflowing
wastebasket with a single foot stomp. His
irritation is subdued yet profound, a dense energy that passes through me. He suffocates
the overstuffed garbage bag with a firm tug and knot of the drawstrings. “Have you spent a full day working lately?”
he finally asks me.
It’s such a tired argument,
foolish and circular and empty of perspective.
Who does more? Whose work is more
valuable? Who wears the pants in the
relationship? I want to laugh and cry at
the same time. I want to tear out pages
of advice from self-help books, about how love is patient and kind, unlike
criticism, which is toxic. I want to
paint a picture of what real problems look like then pour water over the canvas
until the colors bleed and spread all over his misled hands. What color is childhood cancer?
I take a shot at
the high road. “Actually, since you
brought work up, there’s a dance
teacher position available, and the studio is only five miles from here. Between my day job here and paying job there,
I just might be able to log in a full day,” I add, failing to keep sarcasm at
bay. “All it would take from you is an
hour and a half with Maggie on Thursday nights until I’m home.” I smile politely. “I do miss
ballet. What do you think?”
He drifts away from the request, his shined-up
shoes clattering coolly across our kitchen floor. “See if your mom can come over. I have to work,” his backside says to me
before he crosses the room’s threshold.
“You said you’d
make cupcakes with me, Mom.” Dumb
Bitch. Maggie is back, wearing a
nightgown and sunglasses.
“I haven’t forgotten, honey.” I extend a hand and, together, my daughter
and I sit down at the kitchen table to create cupcakes out of clay. It’s late so we’ll only have a time to make a
few.
It’s usually fun
to make a small mess with clay but tonight I have to fake it. I find
myself using clay balls to pick up floor crumbs. I’m distracted and uncreative, someone else. I make a single uninspired cupcake.
“Can I try on your
shoes now?”
“I’ll tell you
what… If you help Mom clean up, I’ll take you upstairs to try on my shoes, but after
that, it’s bedtime. We can play for ten
more minutes. Sound good?”
She beams,
brandishing a mouthful of baby teeth, perfect spaces between them. Her sunglasses have fallen crooked over her
nose. “Okay!”
We head upstairs to
find an indulgent line of shoes in my walk-in closet. Derek, freshly showered, crosses our path, a
towel wrapped around his waist. “Hey,
little one,” he says, mussing her hair.
“Daddy, I get to
wear Mommy’s shoes before bedtime! Want
to see!”
“I wish I could,
honey. Daddy has some work to do.” He looks up at me sternly. “Just don’t have her take out my shoes. I don’t want them wrecked.”
“No worries,” I
say, the bleeding painting passing through my mind.
Maggie takes her
time, inspecting my shoes like a shrewd antique dealer. Squatting on the floor like a frog, she flips
them over to check the soles and heels.
There are needlepoint heels, flats, strappy sandals, and chunky leather
boots to choose from. There's something
to be said about girls and shoes, I think to myself, my watery eyes settling
humorously on my daughter.
I kneel by her side,
close my eyes, and say a silent prayer. Bring this little girl happiness, always. She inspects the soles of my shoes, while I
imagine the footprints I will someday leave behind—the soles of my legacy. I wonder about the strip of
caterpillar-shaped prints that show where I tiptoed through life. Where will they end?
Chapter Four
Silent tears erupt
as Derek takes me from the back. I’m
propped up on my elbows, my pillow grazing my chin as he hardens fully and
finds an exhilarated release and moan. A
dribble of warm liquid wets my tailbone as he pulls himself out of me and
climbs off of the bed.
"Be right
there," he says to me on his way to the bathroom. Turning onto my side, prayer-like hands atop
my pillow, I listen to bathroom sounds-- a faucet water rush, a mouthwash
gargle, a toilet flush roar--until he returns (underwear on) and climbs beneath
the covers beside me.
He lies on his
back, a pair of closed eyes mirroring the ceiling. I wonder what he's thinking. That
was hot. Hope my presentation goes well
tomorrow. A tired hand covers mine
as he slips into a relaxed snore. I love my wife?
The bedroom memory
darkens my mood as I light a backyard cigarette. I don't smoke often, maybe
twice per week, and it's a secret to my family. But when I do finally light up,
I tend to over-think things. Last night
was rough. Not that I expect rock star
sex after ten years. I just want to know
that my man is wild about my interests, not just my body, cliché as that may
sound.
While I smoke and
think, my gaze lingers on our newly hired carpenter He saws off a slice of wood for our latest
home improvement, an updated deck. I approach
him gracefully, working my way around the bulk of his materials. The air is heavy, vaporous with last night’s
rain.
"Be
careful," he says to me, lifting a rugged hand to ward off the cloud of
sawdust. "This stuff can hurt your
eyes."
I take a
cautionary step back. He turns off the
saw. "I just wanted to thank you
for squeezing us in on such short notice," I say, feeling overstated in a ruffled
pink halter and heels.
He pushes his
safety goggles up and over the top of his head.
Liquid dark eyes settle appreciatively on my face, on my hair. "You're quite welcome. You caught me at a rare lull."
His word choice
takes me by surprise. I expected
something less refined from the tanned, sweaty man who wears a ponytail and
work boots. I blow smoke in his opposite
direction. His real-life appearance surpasses
the spidery handwritten name referred to me by a friend: Lance Santigado.
“How long do you
think this job will take, Lance?”
“If the weather
cooperates it should take no longer than a week.” He gestures to the existing
deck, tightening the grip of his white tee shirt against a broad chest. “I have a crew heading over to help tear down
your old wood. Then we’ll lay down the
Redwood and seal it. Once we get
rolling, we’re pretty efficient.”
“Sounds perfect,”
I say back, recalling the confidence in my neighbor’s voice when he referred
Lance. You won’t find anyone better. I
take in a final drag, exhaling slowly, feeling suddenly entitled to my guilty
addiction, and wondering more about our hired help.
“So I hear you’re
pretty busy. You must love what you do.” I toss the butt of my cigarette to the ground,
and squish it out with a Nine West toe.
It works,” he says
with a half-smile. “I meet a lot of good
people… And you can’t beat the great outdoors, right?” He lifts a grateful palm
to the sky.
“This is true,” I
nod back, feeling oddly at ease with the stranger in my backyard. Despite his suburban status, he doesn’t seem
to take himself too seriously. “I just
need to finish a few chores then pick my daughter up at preschool. Can I grab you a coffee?”
“I’m good, thank you,”
he says back. “See you soon. Oh. Before
I forget…” he adds, capping his water bottle, “your husband said he wants to go
with the outdoor hot tub. Eight to ten person,
right?”
My mind rakes
through the executive decision. Eight to ten person? Is this necessary for a family of four? “Hmm,”
I stammer, rubbing my forehead, “I actually thought we were going to go with
the smaller one, but—”
“The larger one
will look nice and it’s a better value.
Trust me, your husband has a point.
I’ll build a sturdy wrap-around bench along the border for your guests
to step onto before they get in. It’ll
be really sharp.”
What’s one more purchase? “Sold.
We’ll go with the larger one,” I say definitively, as though used to
having the final say around here, as though I actually care about more space in
an already spacious home.
“Good decision.” A smile reaches his eyes. “You won’t be disappointed.”
“Thank you. I suppose we—” I catch myself. I’m about to say ‘we can afford it’ but
decide on, “we’ll make good use of it.”
“That you will.”
He winks knowingly.
“See you soon.” I walk
away. By the time I’ve reached the deck
steps, the whirring screech of the saw resumes and my mind wanders to a tedious
to-do list. Laundry,
dishes, grocery shopping, preschool pickup, clean guinea pig cage. There you have it, the gritty necessities
of my job.
That I tackle them
independently sets me apart from the neighborhood crew, most of whom hire
Cleaning Ladies. Not Maids. And certainly not Cleaning Men. The Hired Hands
(to be politically correct) are not considered maids in our circle because, apparently, the connotation conjures a
demeaning image of a woman, as though cleaning is somehow beneath her.
I can’t help but find this mildly amusing, considering
the fact that many of the same women who have chided me for using the term,
have also allowed their thirteen-year-old daughters to parade around our
neighborhood wearing Sexy Maid costumes on Halloween night.
I explored Derek’s
opinion on the subject recently, during a rare date-night out. “Would you prefer hiring a sexy maid over an
average looking cleaner who, perhaps, does a better job?” (I know, a loaded
question.)
“Thinking about
quitting your day job, Felicia?”
“Let’s not get
crazy... That would be hazardous to your health.”
He shook his head
while studying the menu, as though baffled by me.
“Seriously,” I
pressed on, “How much would you pay a maid to do what I do for free in managing
our household?”
“That all depends…”
he said with a playful smirk. “If she
was dressed like Carrie, then maybe I’d pay her double.”
“You liked how
Carrie looked then?”
“I’m kidding,” he
said emphatically, looking up from his menu and smiling widely at his own joke.
“Cindy shouldn’t have let her out in that costume. I agree with you.”
It was an obvious
lie. He’d pay such a woman
generously. “Carrie is a beautiful
girl. I didn’t say I have a problem with
her wearing the costume out. In fact, I
think she pulled it off rather nicely. I
just don’t think her mother should be preaching about how derogative the maid label is while condoning the
costume at the same time, that’s all.”
“I think you think too much.”
“God forbid.”
We ordered up a
storm, strayed from the subject, and sponged up another round of drinks, followed
by a single dessert. Derek, very
sweetly, agreed to share a bread pudding with me. Then, somehow, the conversation crept back up
again. “So you’d take a stand if Maggie
considered wearing that costume when she’s a teenager?”
“Of course I
would,” he answered, his tone suggesting that—despite the ambiguity of his
ideas—his opinion should be obvious to me. “She’s my daughter.”
“But what if she
felt comfortable looking sexy and wearing it?
I mean… What if she simply wanted to look nice?”
“That’s the whole problem,
Felicia.” He looked up from his plate. “As
you know, women who look good can be rather vulnerable.”
“Vulnerable?” I laughed, dipped my celery stick in a bowl of
fresh hummus. “Shocking as this may
sound,” I said, nibbling, “a woman does not dress up so that a man can get
lucky.”
He straightened
out his silverware then rested his chin atop folded hands. “Dangle a piece of steak in front of a tiger,
and he’ll go after it, Felicia.”
“Wow. How remarkably complex of your species…” I
smiled as though enlightened, “but now it makes sense to me.” My celery stick became a pointer. “You wouldn’t want your daughter, the steak,
to wear an outfit like that because you wouldn’t want other guys, the tigers,
to be turned on by her—as you were by Carrie.”
An eye roll defined
the man I’ve known for fifteen years. The
truth was becoming uncomfortable, an itch you can’t seem to get at. Looking back now, perhaps the conversation
had been superfluous on my part. I had
dug too deep. “Yeah, you got me, Felicia.
I was turned on by a fifteen-year-old.”
Our chat had ended
there.
I separate whites
from colors, turn the washer dial to Regular Fabrics, and pull at the knob to
start the wash. The rushing sound of
pipe-water begins immediately, jarring the memory, but not drowning it out
completely.
Likely, it had
been a booze-induced debate. Andre, a current student in the required Drugs and
Alcohol class at school, earnestly shared his knowledge with me on the subject one
night, eyeing the glass of Sauvignon Blanc I had poured for myself, his sister on
the floor, midway through a tantrum. “Alcohol
depresses inhibitions, making the drinker more confident and talkative, you know.” I couldn’t argue with that. To his point, Derek and I had both had a few
drinks, bringing forth confidence
though it had been expressed in different ways.
I probably talked too much. And
Derek?
After walking our
sitter to the door and paying her, my husband—a tiger—approached me with
burning desire, pinning me to the playroom wall. Amidst hot breaths, I heard him whisper her
name. Oh, Carrie. It had been an
innocent yet shocking slip. He must have
been fantasizing about the young girl, dressed as Sexy Maid. I
pretended not to notice. I was too
exhausted to revisit the subject.
Besides, it’s no thunderous revelation to those of us with a vagina that
men fantasize about other women. The
subject has been widely researched. It
is what it is. Still, the reality can be
a tough pill to swallow, especially when you’re considered the meat of the equation. But… enough.
Cheerfully, brilliantly,
the La Bamba ringtone of my cell phone changes the subject. I grab it off the
dryer’s surface and note the caller id.
Derek.
“Hey.” I wedge the
phone between my shoulder and ear while pouring the blue liquid Tide over dirty
laundry.
“Hey. How’s it going?” he asks me.
“Going well,
thanks. You?”
“Buried. Listen… Can you do me a favor?”
“Shoot.”
“Can you let Lance
know I just called the lumber company and they said in order to get the
discount for—”
His words roll to
the back of my mind like distant thunder.
My heart lurches. There, staring
up at me from the top of the dirty heap, peeking out of the corner of Andre’s
American Eagle sweatshirt pocket, lies a plastic bag that’s full of—”
I gasp. Numbly, my fingers pull it out completely. Weed? Andre?
It’s impossible. He’s
fourteen and he’s a good kid. He’s my kid and my kid doesn’t smoke
pot. I unpeel the bag’s folded edge and
lead it tentatively to my nose, hoping the first whiff will prove me
wrong. But the distinctly sweet, earthy
aroma accosts me. I’m nauseous, my mind
clouded with illegitimate, yet possible reasons. It’s his friends. No it’s his schoolwork. It’s his baseball coach. It’s me.
No, it’s Derek. It’s me and
Derek. Each pathetic reason claws at the
rungs of my vertebrae.
“Felicia? You still there? Hellooo?”
The world in my
head is suddenly clumsy, a set of dentures in the wrong mouth. I struggle to make sense of the uninvited
drug, to cobble together a future conversation.
“What were you thinking? I’m disappointed with you. Go to you room. Where did you get this?”
“Anybody home?”
“D-Derek. I’m sorry.
I’m here.” Pot. “You’re not going to believe what I just found.” A pregnant pause. “A bag of weed.” I begin to cry. The word weed—slang
for marijuana, an illegal substance, a killer of brain cells, a pathway to poor
decisions—shrivels up in my mouth. I
close the washer lid, stare at the empty detergent cup. How did
this just happen? “Can you come home early tonight? I know you’re busy. I’m sorry.
I just—I just want to approach this the right way. He’s to good for this, you know? I-I
would like to work togeth—”
“Tonight? There’s no way I can come home early tonight,
Felicia. It’s probably that lowlife he’s
been hanging around with… The kid with
the screwy family… What’s his name?”
I’m alone with this. I feel small and powerless suddenly. My limbs seem to float away. My knees buckle. “His name?
You mean, Trenton? I don’t know,
Derek… I just— ” I press my fingers into
my forehead, “just need… Well, never mind.
I’ll figure it out.” Tears pour
down my cheeks.
“I’ll talk to him
about it tomorrow if you want. I don’t
have any meeting scheduled then.” He sighs.
“This is ridiculous. Loser
friends, that’s what this is about. Dumb
fucks. But can you just tell Lance I
called about the discount. It should be
all set now that I ordered more wood.”
Discount?
More wood? The request seems
to fly in from an alternate universe.
“Oh, right, the wood for the deck.
I’ll let Lance know. I’ll keep
you posted.” We hang up and I squeeze
my lids shut, pressing out more tears.
It’s
impossible. This is wrong on so many
levels. Maybe it’s my penance for—” I
shudder and push away the thought. My son’s the best thing that’s ever happened
to me.
I glance at the
time on my cell phone. Ten-thirty. I need to go pick Maggie up at school
now. I close the lid to the washing
machine, turn around, and place the bag of weed down on the vanity
counter. My unacceptable face stares at
me from the mirror. I’m splotchy and pink. Smears of mascara darken the skin beneath my
eyes. I hold back a new round of tears, turn on the faucet, and splash a few
handfuls of water over my eyes before padding them dry with a hand- towel.
The bag of weed
dangles hopelessly in one hand as I exit the room.
He’s there.
“H-hi. Just came in
to use the—” He extends a gentle hand and touches my arm. “You okay?”
Not again. New tears fall uncontrollably
from my eyes before I wipe them away in haste.
I’m horrified and embarrassed but it’s too late. The
carpenter’s eyes have already found the bag, guilty as charged, in my hand and,
within minutes, I find myself sitting down at the kitchen table, telling him
exactly what’s happened.
And he listens.
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