“Click.”
Just when Elizabeth thought that getting through the evening would be as precipitous as that delay long ago in the Boston airport, Rosie and Sharon appeared in the kitchen, bran-dishing empty soap boxes, with lenses drawn on and shutters cut out.
“Click.”
Sharon pulled a drawing out of the box, of Elizabeth in the kitchen at the stove, stirring and smiling.
“God, you draw well, Sharon.”
“Click.”
Rosie handed her a drawing of James and Rosie out in the rose garden, playing Monkey in the Middle with his dog Leon and a Frisbee.
“Rosie! This is wonderful. We'll send some to Rae.”
“Click.”
Rae at her loom.
“Click.”
Sharon standing on her head, horizontal motion line suggesting a cartwheel.
“You two knock me out.”
“One more, one more!” Rosie said, backing away slowly in a crouch.
“Click.”
Elizabeth and James's heads on the pillows in Elizabeth's room, under the covers. Rosie had James's fluffy hair just right, and a heart in a caption balloon above Elizabeth's head.
The little girls giggled hysterically and tore out of the kitchen to compose themselves before dinner.
Everything is going to be fine, remember? Just relax. He will call.
It was quarter to ten when she tucked the girls into Rosie's bed. Everything was going to be fine. He was probably working as hard as he could, trying to finish so he could knock off and surprise her by coming over. The speed or coke or whatever he had would keep him up all night: he would be missing her by now.
She poured some Bushmills into a glass decorated with a drawing of Cruella de Vil and ten dalmatians, drank it pacing in the living room. She put Ry Cooder on the stereo to drown out the Cruella de Vil theme song playing in her mind and put another log on the fire. She sat down stiffly on the couch and studied the part in Cruella's half-black, half-white hair. Unless, after he called, he planned to come over, she was not going to say I
love you
tonight. Too bad for you, James; if only you'd called at a
reasonable hour, I would have told you. But if you call in the nextâoh, God, this is becoming “A Telephone Call.”
This is not progress, she thought. I am almost forty and am anxiously waiting for my goddamn boyfriend to call. She saw herself lying in a hospital bed, weak but beautiful, surrounded by James and Rae and Rosie. She tried not to think about James. A memory blip of him flashed through her mind, and she blocked it by silently singing Cruella de Vil. No, this is not progress, she thought. I should call him. Maybe he's dead! Maybe he's had a heart attack like his dear old dad, or maybe he'sâno, not in bed with another.... Progress would be to have faith. She got up and poured another shot of whiskey into the glass.
By eleven she felt the fierce disappointment of a fifteen-year-old girl at her parents' house who has been stood up by a boy, or the five-year-old whose goldfish has died. She went to the phone but sat back down. He said he will call, and he will. Cruella de Vil, Cruella de Vil. Fuck progress. Tonight, I want to wallow, in the calculated shallowness that allows men not to make that three-minute phone call which would better the woman's world for a while. But finally, when the phone rang, she smiled, stood up unsteadily, and lurched toward the phone.
Eyes shining, heart pounding, she answered with a note of incipient boredom.
It was Grace Adderly, calling to say she was sorry to be calling so late.
Crushed, Elizabeth said, “Oh, it's all right. God, I haven't seen you two for ages.”
“Well, we're just fine, and we miss you. I've been thinking about you all day, wondering if everything was all right. I know it's late, but you're often up till all hours.”
“Everything's just fine, Grace.” Except for, you see, I'm cracking up. “I'm just lying in the living room, watching the fire and reading.”
“We want you to come visit us soon, in the city! We
miss you
and Rosie.”
“Hello, Elizabeth,” Charles called from somewhere nearby.
“Did you hear him? He said hello.”
“Hello! Gee, we both miss you too.”
“Why don't you come for dinner soon?”
Oh, God, I've really got to hang up now, I know I haven't seen you for months, but you see my boyfriend is supposed to call, just to say hello, and I haven't seen him for over fifteen hours.
“Well, we'd love to, as soon as I get my car fixed.”
“Oh, is it on the blink again?”
“Yes. Again.” Not really, but if I come to the city, I'll have to drive home after all that wine or, even worse, stay the night.
How many times had James tried to call since she'd been on the phone with Grace? Rae, waiting for Brian....
“Well, little Walter went and had
babies
on us.” Elizabeth grimaced, tightened her fist in frustration. “You know little Walter, don't you, the tiger-stripe with a knot on his tail?”
“Two tacos and a fur hat,” said Charles in the background.
“Charles! That's a horrible thing to say about a little cat. Shame on you.” She began to tell Elizabeth about the nice movers who had dropped the dishwasher on Walter's tail but Elizabeth cut her off.
“Oh, Grace, it's good to hear your voice. Why don't Rosie and I come in for lunch next weekend?”
“Lovely. Which day?”
“I'll give you a call in the next few days, when I have a better idea of how long the car will take.”
Finally Grace hung up.
At midnight, she called his house. No one answered. That was odd, because he couldn't disconnect his phone, could only take it off the hook, in which case she would be getting a busy signal. He must not be home. He had lied, then. Unless he was on his way over here. What if he's in someone else's bed? Golf balls.
That just can't be. He is in love with you. Don't worry. Think of all the disasters which never happened outside your mind. She poured some more Bushmills and stretched out on the couch, old and lonely and duped, waiting for him to arrive. Her loneliness triggered off the memory of twenty-some years ago, when she had awoken one night, well past one, to the sound of a piano and had tiptoed in her flannel nightgown to the top of the stairs, where she could hear her mother playing and singing softly,
“Someone to Watch Over Me,” sad as possible, twice in a row.
She exhorted herself to have faith. She imagined marrying him, imagined the family of three they would be, imagined softly scratching his downy back with her nails. She got up and called.
“Hello?” said a woman, before the phone was slammed down, and for just a few moments Elizabeth lost her mind. She wanted to die.
She hated him more than she had hated anyone else. She gulped at her drink, just hanging on. Steady, old girl; good riddance. Better now than after a marriage. She wanted to light into him so vehemently that he would sink to his knees with his hands on his ears, as if she were sounding a drum-busting high note. She splashed whiskey out of the glass, her hand was shaking so hard. I hope you never sell anything else that you write. Rosie and I weren't enough? Asshole! We were the best thing that ever happened to you. She lurched, with fire in her eyes, up the stairs, to her room, holding the bottle, loaded for bear.
At two she passed out, crying, and when she awoke, just before dawn, she wished she could have died somehow, without deserting Rosie.
Rosie and Sharon played that morning in the murky green stream that ran down a cleft in the ridge and ended in a stagnant pond filled with moss and minnows, willows, frogs, cattails, dragonflies, rushes, and water skeeters. They took off their shoes and stepped into the knee-deep water; Rosie, in baggy red shorts, walked upstream, with Sharon behind her, chewing on a reed, speaking in frog. Green frogs, brown frogs, blackish-red salamanders: they were brave when it came to slimy things, caught and freed dozens. They fought a duel midstream with cattails, then stripped off the brown fuzz and carried the rods to use as spears if the need arose. The stream was the Amazon, and they were its first explorers.
They screamed, giggling, when their tennis shoes, tied at the laces and draped over their shoulders, thumped against their backsâgiant leeches, poison-tipped spears. They pointed out monkeys and snakes that hung from the branches beside the water, caught a glimpse of cannibals with bones in their noses and a big pot of boiling water and onionsâthere, behind that
boulderâstepped over sleeping alligators, and stared into the bushes for the gleaming gold eyes of jaguars, or of deadly spiders with jeweled bodies, as black and bright as a witch doctor's mask.
The tropical sun beat down on their backs until, finally, hunger drove them back to the mouth of the mighty river.
“We should have brought a lunch.”
“No kidding.”
“I'm starving to death.”
“So am I.”
“We could collect acorns, and make some mush....”
“There's tuna fish at my house.”
“Is your dad home?”
“Yeah.”
“Is your mom home?”
“Yeah.”
“Well, let's go there. There's always money in your dad's easy chair.”
“But if we went to your house, we could get your allowance.”
“Well. Maybe we should go to your house for lunch, get the money from the chair, then go to my house and get my allowance. Then we can go get some candy.”
“Okay. But I have to be home at three. I have a violin lesson.”
“Okay,” said Rosie, and they set off for the Thackery home.
Mrs. Thackery made them tuna fish on Wonder Bread and pink lemonade. Rosie adored her.
The girls got the giggles soon after lunch, and Mrs. Thackery asked them nicely to go outside to play.
“YOU'VE GOT FIVE MINUTES TO GET OUT OF THIS HOUSE,” Mr. Thackery bellowed from his study up-
stairs.
“We're going to go to Rosie's.”
“All right, my darling. But be home by two thirty, forâ”
“FOUR MINUTES THIRTY SECONDS.” Rosie looked around anxiously, half seeing the Beast upstairs, in his lair, covered with scales and hair.
“Give me a kiss, my darlings.” Rosie kissed her soft sweet neck, awkwardly, below the chin.
“TICK TICK TICK!”
Meanwhile, back on Willow, Elizabeth grieved. Her sense of loss and hate wiped out the weeks of happy memories. Her pride was mortally wounded, and a river of jealous, revengeful, and humiliating thoughts occupied her mind. Now she felt certain that he had been with the woman who'd answered his phone, the first time. But she wasn't going to confront him. She thought that it would secretly please him for her to be livid about another woman; he might successfully use it as material. So she took the phone off the hook for the day. When she finally had to face him, she would keep her voice level and let him know that she had cut him off at the root.
She took a quick walk into town to take her mind off the telephone and tried to believe that James was no big loss. Willow was lush and bright, and neighbors looked up from their gardens to wave as she strode past imperiously. These people seemed to take pride in her now, pride in her elegant clothes and looks, as the children in Rosie's class took pride in Rosie's genius: it added certain elevation to their movie. She was silent and friendly, returned waves, nodded as her father once had, with a quiet snort of smily nervousness. Mavis Lee's mother sat weeding a begonia bed, with a can of beer beside her on the earth, wearing a finely woven straw bonnet which had eyelets around the brim through which the sun cast a necklace of tiny light beads on her aged brown chest. When Mavis Lee's mother looked up to toast Elizabeth, the necklace fell across her face.
Beerâshe would get some beer, and garden, she would wear a hat for shade: everything was going to be fine. It wasn't the end of the world. The end of the world would be to lose Rosie.
What would Rae say? That everything that happened was supposed to happen, and happened for the best, no matter how disastrous it seemed. You would see this later, farther down the road. Rae would say that God hadn't meant for Elizabeth and
James to be together forever, because He had someone else in the wings for her, who didn't smoke or write or fuck other women.
Walking home with a six-pack of ale and some groceries, her throat ached, her stomach flushed, and the hot red rash flared up behind her eyes. Back home, in the kitchen, she opened an ale to fight back the tears, and her stomach was empty except for coffee and steamed milk. The thought of surviving the next few daysâprobably, in fact, the next few weeksâfilled her with a towering, discouraged agony. She was hopeless, would never be wholly happy again. But the ale lifted her spirits, and a jolt of hatred came to save the day. She opened another ale, at about the time the girls stepped out of the Amazon, and took it out to the garden.
As she gathered sweet williams and snapdragons, she swore she would not honor him with a scornful confrontation, but hostile dialogue spun through her mind, and her lips moved as she bent over the pansies. She caught herself, looked around to see if anyone was watching her go mad, and, finding no one, willed herself to relax. She drank the ale with a vengeance as she watered the morning glories, tried to concentrate on the white pinstripes radiating from their china-blue centers. She talked to herself again, out loud, muttering insults, caught herself, and stopped.
The man was a joke, not worth this misery. She ran through the List againâthe smoking, the height, the shirts, the dog, the pretentious quotes, his repellent chewingâand the treachery.
The bright garden blurred for a moment as she stood up with an armful of flowers. He had ripped her off, betrayed her, and she could never trust him again.
She walked fairly steadily to the kitchen and arranged the flowers in three crystal vases, took one to the living room, one to her night table, and one to Rosie's room. She put them on the chest of drawers and stared at the giant panda Madonna, thought first of Rosie in her arms, and then of the times she had held James that way, and then of the times she had felt him hold
her
with the sad composure of the panda Madonna, and couldn't stand the pain.
Halfway through another ale, she felt that she could breathe again. She went back out to the garden and sat down beside a flower bed. Her house and garden and child were stunning; everything was going to be okay. This too, she thought, shall pass. She sat admiring her long thin legs, zeroed in on the gypsy-red toenails, cut to the red blossoms of the ginger root, cut to the beautiful white Victorian under a bright blue sky, cut to the woman with sun on her fine black hair, leisurely drinking a beer in her garden, calm, a woman to envy.
Her blade grew duller and duller. She couldn't remember the names of common items; for instance, she couldn't recall “manuscript” as that thing of James's which she now wouldn't have to read. She snapped her fingers; what was the word? M and N appeared on the screen behind her eyes and she stared at the letters as if having a moment of second sight: manuscript, that was it.
She needed Rae desperately all of a sudden, needed just to hear her voice, and decided to call her in New Mexico. But when she stood to go inside, she swayed forward, regained her equilibrium, and swayed slightly backward. She gagged, surprised, and looked down at her feet, which suddenly seemed not big enough to support her tall frame, and stood swaying in the hot sun, an inflatable punch-down clown on weighted cardboard feet. She walked slowly inside, cradling the flowers, trying not to lurch. The whirlies began on the porch steps, and it took all her resolve to make it inside.
She held on to the wall, holding back vomit: you were a fool to drink three ales on an empty stomach in the midday sun.
Oh, I do not feel well at all, she thought, as she inched along the wall to the living room. She flopped down onto the couch and lay down, swallowing over and over. The couch was on the high seas, and then on the low choppy seas, and she knew she had to vomit, but the bathroom was too far away; even if there was time, she would have to crawlâ
urg,
bile rose past her throat and she blearily looked at and reached for the clear glass fruitbowl.
Urggggggg.
She threw up in the bowl, on deflated grapes, over and over, feeling better. When she stopped, her eyes were full of tears. The dry heaves began: there was nothing left to throw up. I am not impressed, she thought. To have reached such a low
that the dry heaves are an improvement. At least it is taking my mind off Jamesâoh, shit on toast, I have hit rock bottom. James! See what you made me do?
It was two o'clock and the girls were four blocks away.
“We forgot to look in your father's chair.”
“He wasn't in a very good mood.” They opened the white lattice gate and stepped into the Ferguson yard. “How come there's never any change in your easy chair?”
“Cause my mama doesn't carry it in her pockets.”
“Why?”
“Because it makes her look bulky.”
“You think she's going to marry James?”
“Yeah.” I hope so.
They burst through the front door and tore into the living room. Elizabeth, on the couch, was dead to the world. She was making the gurgling, hiccupy noise of a person who may be throwing up shortly, and a bowl of vomit and grapes lay on the floor beside her.
Rosie looked as if she had been slapped, hard, out of the blue. Blood rushed to her face. She blinked back tears, nostrils flaring, and ran from the room, up the stairs. Sharon's surprise had passed and she lingered for a moment, taking in the scene with a look of infinite compassion. Elizabeth opened an eye, saw Sharon, and closed it. Sharon turned and bolted upstairs too.
Rosie was in her bedroom, crying, and wouldn't look at Sharon when she first entered. It was all a bad dream. If James could see her mother now, he'd never want to marry her. Sharon would never forget this, would from now on see this scene when thinking of Rosie or Elizabeth.
“It doesn't really matter,” said Sharon, kind, sturdy friend that she was. “Maybe she has the flu.”
“Of course she has the flu, you think she goes around just throwing up or something?”
“No, I didn't think that.”
Rosie stared down at her pigeon-toed feet, brooding but no
longer crying. “Well, I think I'll go into her room and get the money she owes me.”
“Okay.”
“She owes me a
lot.”
There were three tens and a one in Elizabeth's wallet. One dollar was not going to make much of a dent in Rosie's hate. A ten, on the other hand ... and there were three of them, besides. Plenty to go around. Sharon watched in horror as Rosie pocketed a ten and replaced the wallet in the purse. Rosie looked at her defiantly.
“What are you staring at? She owes me ten.”
“Rosie! We're gonna get in such trouble.”
“I told you. She owes me it.”
Sharon looked around the room wildly, holding her breath.
“Let's get out of here,” she said.
They tiptoed downstairs, tore out the front door, and ran to town without stopping. Breathless, they entered the five and dime, where Mavis Lee measured out a dollar's worth of candy corn in two small white bags. They stopped at the grocery store for Mystic Mints and Cheetos, bought a can of Coke at the gas station, and went to the fort on the lagoon. They started with the candy corn, gobbling it down like popcorn.
It was a sad, frenzied time they spent, sitting on bricks, the day they ripped off Elizabeth. Plagued by bad conscience, guilty on Elizabeth's behalf, they felt the Mystic Mints grow chalky in their throats and finished only half the box before moving on to the Cheetos, all of which they consumed with the help of the soda.
Rosie's mind reeled with shame. The food helped, in a way, but how could she face her mother, hating her now as she did? She hated the woman from whom she had stolen, hated the woman who'd loved her so much.
Elizabeth woke up at three and eyed the bowl on the floor. It all came back rather quickly: the ale, the whirlies, the retching, and a vague recollection of Sharon. Dread filled her. Rosie and
Sharon had seen her, passed out. Rosie, I swear to God, it will never happen again. You see, James wasâJames betrayed me, you see, and soâno. I know. I drank too much before, too. Sometimes I feel tired and weak, drinking makes me feel better; but Rosie, I swear to God, I will not embarrass you again.
She got up and went upstairs to wash up. She'd been trying to cut down, and drinking more than ever: it was time to truly get a grip. Rosie was everything in the world to her, the great constant love. That Rosie trust her, from now on, was foremost in her mind as she climbed the stairs to the bathroom. Fuck men, fuck James: the hell with them all. She brushed her teeth, put on mascara, brushed her hair up into a bun, and rubbed blusher onto her cheeks. Rosie, I'm sorry, she thought, and planned the perfect meal to win back her affections: cheeseburgers, potato chips, something special for dessert. Fresh air would do her good. She would walk to the bakery for brownies. That was it, fresh air and brownies.
She breathed deeply, relieved and contrite, went to her purse, and opened the wallet.