Authors: Jamie Mason
That's how the daydream goes anyway, just like every other daydreamâthat unfocused longing to have something else. And it's hardly the domain of maidens at all. Everyone does it.
I was no different, in a different sort of way. I tended the same garden of endless, vague demandâthat the next moment needn't be necessarily better, only that it be new. I wanted to be swept away, tooâstraight under a rug. Patrick was the best broom a girl like me could ask for.
We were still in our mortarboards and gowns when we picked up the invitations from the printer. Patrick's parents were thrilled. Young love with strings attached was an Aldrich family tradition. Pat's mother had dropped out of technical college to go full housewife at nineteen. Pat's older brother had his first child at twenty. And the four younger Aldrich sisters, each two years apart, spanned both a middle school and a high school and considered wedding planning no different from angling for the perfect prom, even if the dresses were hand-me-downs.
But they were happy, all of them. Or at least they were smiling, doing every regular thing and doing it well. Pat's mother taught me to make pie crust and bought us an electric skillet as a wedding present. I was at a loss at first, but the dull, square thing turned out to be tremendously useful. I used it a hell of a lot more than the crystal candy dish or the tablecloth that was simply too nice to go underneath supper.
Love is love when it's electrifying, but what is it when it's soothingly plain? As far as I could tell, it was ideal.
In our hearts, though, Patrick and I pulled out of rhythm. The edges of our wants didn't match up as neatly as they should have. I wanted to plant myself in the picture of his plain pedigree, in his family's pleasant, geraniums-in-the-flowerbox ordinariness. And he, unfortunately, was banking big deposits of hope that I had more of my mother in me than I let on. He was quite taken with her.
Ours being a college town, Patrick and I both lived at home and commuted to campusâPatrick to save money and I to be near her. I was always touching base, pinging home, perpetually nervous to spend too much time out of sight for fear of the rest of the proverb.
He and I did dinner and the movies. We studied and ate carryout. We made out in the car. But after any time spent at my house with my mother, he'd grow pensive, staring into my eyes, searching, waiting, as if he'd thrown a stone down a well.
I ignored this because my brother said that Patrick was a boring dork who would build a picket fence, knock me up with 2.3 children, then buy a golden retriever. That sounded perfect to me.
My brother eventually got over not heading out to Quantico and falling into some urban FBI field office for thirty years and a gold watch. He became a cop at home. He stayed my best friend and my confidant. There's never been anyone else like Simon. He had always been my conscience and the only one I ever talked to about my problems with life. It was only natural to carry it into our lives as adults. Simon alone understood where we came from. He was always the only one who ever knew I wasn't crushingly normal. I told Simon everything automatically.
So there was a cold curiosity in feeling suddenly secretive in those months running up to our ruin.
Friday
I
check
the rearview mirror too much. I always have, but it's got a lot worse in the last few months. Up until I was being followed, it was just a by-product of my mother's instruction. I've always worn the vigilance she taught us as nerves. She wore it as custom-fitted armor.
I check the clock, then the mirror again. I'm making good time and there's nothing behind me but a long tail of gray road stretched to the horizon, empty. If I'm paranoid, I've come by it honestly.
She had worked on us so that she would feel we were safe, but also in hopes that we would have bigger lives. She thought those who, given the same amount of time, didn't dissect the moments as they sped past were doomed to a hazy picture of the world, a plain and normal sketch of it. But take a microscope to your small, diffuse view and suddenly a sharp vastness was yoursâeven in the middle of a parking lot or on the end of a lonely pier on the margin of a lake.
But her magic spells had side effects. She knew that. When Patrick and I had just moved out of our newlywed apartment, bureaucratically now all grown up with a mortgage that would chain us to fifty-five-hour workweeks for the foreseeable future, my mother brought me flowers from her garden and warned me of recruitment.
“Don't be surprised if Paul tries to get you to come work for him one day,” she'd said. “He's got his eye on you because of this crazy idea he has that there's some sort of premium pedigree for his shenanigans. He thinks that since he was looking for my uncle when he found me, it somehow works around, in his mind anyway, to believing that it's in the blood.”
Paul had already approached me twice, once directly and once obliquely, but I'd ignored him both times all the way down to not even mentioning it to my mother.
“Nah, he wouldn't want me,” I said. “I'm no good with languages.”
She studied me with a tight smile. “Right. Though I don't recall you ever studying a language.”
“I took Latin.” I busied myself with straightening the salt and pepper shakers against the napkin holder.
“Right,” she said again. “Latin.”
“Besides, are you saying that I shouldn't follow in your footsteps? What's wrong with working for Paul? It seems to pay nicely, and no matter what happened, you were never in a serious hurry to leave it all behind.” I risked a quick look up to see if the conversation was still on the lighter side.
“Paul and I had a deal. After the Long Trip, I said I'd stay and I stayed. High jinks ensued,” she said with an admirably straight face. “Anyway, all I'm saying is that if you ever do go that way, don't let them make you think it was your idea if it wasn't.
That
you will resent. But don't ask me how I know that. Anyway, I suppose there's still plenty of time for you to learn some undead languages if you wanted to.” She winked at me.
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
Our little Vess cabal had always danced over and around the notion of marital commitment. My mother enjoyed male companionship, always presenting it as a positive thing without confusing the issue by defining it as a necessary pillar of permanence in our lives. She dissolved her every partnership over the years with firm kindness, until Simon and I learned not to attach more than mild friendship to each carefully vetted man who came and would eventually go.
She teased us, and her suitors, that she could never get married again, obviously, since her left hand was down by two fingers and there wasn't any place to hang a ring. My resolve to persist with Patrick felt almost secessionist in my family's established patterns. Mother didn't. Simon didn't. Then I went and did.
I'd thought of it as a character flaw in her, a rare inability. I saw it, like her hand, as a forgivable deformity through some injury that maybe our father had dealt her. I wondered if perhaps in her travels there might have been some hurts I didn't know of, losses that had sentenced her romantic heart to solitary confinement.
I knew my mother didn't trust love.
She'd kept the last name Vess but unmoored her life (and ours) from the man himself, Jonas Vess, when Simon was still a baby. She explained, when I was old enough, that she'd delivered an ultimatum and that he had wasted little time in trampling all over the line she'd put in the sand.
The rift had to do with his drinking, which in turn had something to do with his poorly managed dissatisfaction over being occasionally left at home as a househusband in a time when that sort of thing was less than fashionable and more than odd. My mother traveled much less once we were born, but still more than could go without notice from the nosier neighbors. She had trusted her husband's discretion.
When she'd been confronted by the tipsy Tupperware lady at a block party with a smile and a nudge and a “What
have
you been up to, Mata Hari? Jonas says it's all very hush-hush,” the match hit the kindling.
His intemperance was incompatible with her obligations, both her contractual need for control and her instinctive one. When she deemed me ready for the whole story, I took away a decidedly good-news/bad-news interpretation of the facts. My mother was extremely protective of us, and I basked in the safe perimeter of her fierce glow. On the other hand, I didn't know the word
intractable
at the time, but I did know what it looked like: my mother, dry-eyed, rescinding her love and closing the door in my father's defeated face. And never a tear shed over it, that I had ever seen.
We saw him only twice more before I started school and then nothing but the occasional letter after that. He did what divorced men did in those days. Starting over most often meant starting all the way over, as if the other life and the starter family hadn't happened. I knew several kids who saw their dads on weekends and maybe for a few weeks in the summer, but I knew just as many whose fathers were a birthday card with cash in it and a single present in the mail at Christmas.
Jonas Vess died of lung cancer before the surge of the Internet. The absence of his digital footprint made him seem less real to me than even the vagueness of my impressions of him: the cactus scratch of his bearded face against my cheek, the taste of red rope licorice that he bought for me in the grocery store, his pitch-perfect whistling in the garage, in the yard, in the kitchen . . .
When she had told me that she'd struck a deal with Paul Rowland to stay on as both his hammer and nail, I knew it had something to do with Aunt Marie. My mother had seemed resolved to be rid of Paul and his erratic, wall-dinging business when she first returned from the Long Trip. She avoided him when she could and firmly distanced herself with the coldest of shoulders when she couldn't. But I overheard hints of tears and snippets of conversation in her first weeks back, on the telephone or in the living room with her sister, until ultimately, my mother wedged herself between Marie and whatever had happened while my mother was away.
Paul and Marie played house during those months that my mother was gone, while Simon and I were quasi-in-her-care. At first, Paul had come over regularly to deliver messages from our mother. He brought news and assurances of her safety in the days that turned into weeks and months. Eventually, he sort of never left.
Aunt Marie was the pretty one. Annette was the younger sister and was certainly no mountain troll, but Marie had every physical gift that my mother owned, only slightly Snow Whiteâer. At the crossroads of our need and her availability, when my mother was called away, Marie was divorced with a son in college, who had fallen estranged by the law of tough love.
My cousin, Justin, had found that he was even better at being the life of the party than he was at chemistry and biology. The funds for his tuition and books burned like straw in pursuit of beer to chug and white powder to whisk up his nose. And he was generous with his vices to an extra fault. His no-account friends warmed their party at the bonfire of Justin's money and good sense, and the situation went from a concern to a disaster in record time. Marie had cut him off financially, and he never called her except to wheedle her into a change of heart and
out of
some cash, only to break that heart with the vow to never call her again when she said no.
At the time of my mother's Long Trip, Marie was depressed and anxiousâand also anxious over being depressed, because the most basic things in her life weren't getting done when she couldn't find a reason to get out of bed in the mornings. Her sick leave from work dried up, her checking-account balance fell to overdrawn, and her pantry was full of out-of-date condiments and not much to eat.
Then my mother needed her in a flurry of dramatic emergency and hasty exit, and Paul, the standard-bearer of my mother's much more glamorous troubles, was an intriguing distraction for Marie.
His attraction to her was both nuanced and obvious. Even at thirteen years old, I saw that Paul's control over my mother had its gaps, and that those unbridgeable ravines bothered him. If he looked at it sideways, sex and affection with Annette's look-alike could rough in a more complete illusion that he owned full jurisdiction over his protégé's kingdom.
And all of that might not have been a fair appraisal of Paul's motives and Marie's weaknesses, even though it was probably the state of things. Whatever else it was, it could still have been true love also.
Either way, my mother wasn't having it.
Aunt Marie had lived only a few miles away from our house. For the duration of my mother's trip, she stayed most of the nights with us, but she never technically moved in. She launched her workdays from her own place, getting ready for the office from her own shower and closet after seeing Simon and me off on the bus.
I knew that Paul had a key to Marie's house. He also had the good sense not to make a habit of being in my mother's bed when Simon and I woke up. But there were signs he'd stayed over, sneaking in after our bedtime and ducking out before dawn. There were double glasses in the sink, or too many cigarettes in the ashtray, and often a sheltered dry patch on the driveway that would have been dew-soaked if a car hadn't been parked there all night.
Marie lightened and brightened with purpose into the stretch of my mother's absence. I wanted not to know why, but two obedient and well-groomed children to roll out as evidence of her decency and capability went a far ways to soothe her fear that she couldn't do anything right. And a world-traveled lover to round out that picture, an image of achievement to cover over the hole of failure that she'd been staring into, was plenty reason enough to cradle the hope that it would last, if not forever, than for longer than the reach of her old melancholy. I'm sure Aunt Marie was relieved when we would get news of her sister that served as proof of life, but she wasn't on fire to have my mother back either.