Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
Michael has to pee into a sieve.
If he doesn't pee those stones out
the doctor will have to go in and get themâ
a procedure that involves,
among other things,
having a tube shoved into his penis.
So I cheer Michael on.
Telling him I know he can do it.
Telling him I've got a good feeling about this.
Then, after dozens of failed attempts,
with surprisingly little fanfare or pain,
he finally passes the stones.
And somehow this fills me with hopeâ
hope that our marriage,
with equally little fanfare or pain,
will manage
to pass its stones
as well.
First it burns with desire,
with uncontrolled lust.
You touch each other
and you combust.
But if no one remembers
to stir the embers,
to feed them, poke them,
tend them, stoke them,
the blaze that once sizzled
will sputter and fizzle.
Which is why
I always say:
thank the Lord
for lingerie.
I love that when we first met,
even though he was dating
a Marilyn Monroe look-alike at the time
(I'm not exaggeratingâ
she was actually getting paid
to impersonate Marilyn Monroe),
he
dumped her for
me.
I love his art, his eyes, his thighs,
and the tiny flecks of paint
that dot his cheeks like freckles.
I love that he has somehow managed
to convince himself that I'm
in better shape now than I've ever been.
I love that he always notices
and compliments me
when I lose weight.
But that he never complains,
or even seems to be aware of it,
when I gain it back.
I love that he's funny,
always saying things like,
“I've succeeded far beneath my wildest dreams.”
Or, “The trouble with me is
that I can make a horse drink,
but I can't lead it to water.”
And I love
that even when he's miserable,
he never stops whistling.
Being married makes me feel
like I'm still trapped in that mine shaft,
only my husband's in there with me.
And there's plenty of air
and candlelight
and champagne for us to sip
while we munch on cheddar
and green grapes
and pecans.
There's plenty of Maugham
and Capote and Maupassant
for us to read aloud to each other,
plenty of Coltrane
and Hawkins and Webster
to saxophone us while we make love.
On a good day,
I'm still trapped in that shaft,
but I'm hoping that the rescue workers
will take
their sweet time
finding us.
The house has a hushed, awestruck vibe.
Even Pinkie is oddly quiet.
Jane and Duncan
have that new-parent glow.
Madison has that new-sibling
shell-shocked look.
She takes our hands
and leads us over to the bassinet.
“Dis is Cwementine,” she says. “She's
mine!”
“Clementine⦔ I say. “What a pretty name!”
“She
is
pretty,” Michael tells Madison.
“But not nearly as pretty as you.”
The little girl smiles shyly, and says,
“Wiww you push me on my swing?”
“Of course I will,” Michael replies,
and they head out into the backyard.
I look down at Clementine,
swaddled and snoozing,
bracing myself for the usual
tidal wave of yearning.
But it doesn't come!
For the first time in ages,
I'm actually able to look at a baby
and not feel like weeping.
She tells me that in 1979
a sociologist named Ellen Langer
did a study.
This study involved putting a group
of seventy-year-old men into a setting that
made it seem like it was twenty years earlier.
The only magazines, TV shows, games,
books, and music available to these men
were what were popular in 1959,
and they were told
to act and talk
as if it were 1959, too.
Sam tells me
that this study
had amazing results.
That after just one week
not only did these septuagenarians
look younger,
but their joints
became more flexible,
their posture improved,
and their fingers,
which usually get shorter with age,
actually lengthened.
Sam tells me
I should have
a more positive attitude.
And maybe she's rightâ
maybe if I start picturing myself
with the body I had twenty years ago,
then that little ring of fat, jiggling around
my waistline like a belt made of sausages,
will mysteriously disappear.
Maybe if I don't
feel
ten pounds overweight
I won't
be
ten pounds overweight.
And if I don't
think
I have any wrinkles
I won't
have
any wrinkles.
Maybe if I
stop thinking of my hot flashes
as hot flashes
and start thinking of them
as short private vacations
in the tropics,
I'll suddenly
find myself
with a nice deep tan.
But something like intuition compels me
to slog through the infinite indignities
of getting ready to go outâ
the hair dye, the blow-dry, the plucking,
the potions, the depressing descent
into the depths of my closet:
Am I thin enough to wear this?
Courageous enough to wear that?
Daft enough to don those?
I don't feel
at all like going
to the party
but something like longing
propels me to barrel out into the night
with my husband anyhow.
And something like destiny gets us there
just in time to see our host place a match
to the logs he's laid on the hearth;
just in time
to witness the conflagration
that erupts.
And I'm so amazed I have to ask:
“How did you get the fire to catch like that
with just a single match?”
Our host smiles a that's-easy smile,
then reaches into a sack and hands me something.
“Pinecones are the trick,” he says.
Pinecones�!
I think back on all the hours I've wasted
balling up newspaper and shoving it under logs.
I recall all the fallen pinecones
I've been passing by for years on my daily runs,
littering my path like benign grenades.
To me
they'd seemed like nothing more
than sprained ankles waiting to happen.
That sometimes,
when you
stop
and take a look around,
when you pause
for a moment
and look again,
through a whole new lens,
at what you've been looking at all your life,
you're able to see for the first time
the things you've been
taking for grantedâ¦
Which is when
I decide
that from now on
even if
I don't feel like going
to the party,
especially
if
I don't feel like going
to the party,
I will
always
go
to the party.
Now that my mother is off of steroids
and done with rehab and out of the hospital,
she's living at home.
Alone.
I've tried to convince her
to come to California and live with
us
.
But she says fish and visitors
stink after three days.
And besides,
she'd miss her house,
and her friends,
and raking the leaves.
I've tried to convince her to let me find
someone to move in with her and look after her.
But she says she likes her privacy;
says she doesn't
need
any looking after.
And no matter how much I wheedle
and threaten, no matter how much I insist,
she refuses to wear
the emergency necklace I gave herâ
the one with the button on it
that she can press to summon help
in case she ever falls down again
and can't get back up.
“That thing gets in my way,” she grouses.
“It's ugly. It makes me feel
like a helpless old woman.
And I may be old, but I am
not
helpless.”
So I call her every day
to make sure she's okay.
And most of the time she's perfectly fine,
her wit sharper than a paper cut.
Sometimes, though,
there almost seems to be
a suspicious frost in her tone,
as though she's not quite sure
I am who I say I am.
My mother doesn't answer.
I tell myself she's probably
just taking a nap.
But fear's icy fingers
grab my throat
and won't let go.
I finally call
her next-door neighbor Eric
and beg him to knock on her door.
Then, I stand here waitingâ
with my eyes shut tight,
and the phone nearly crushing my ear,
trying
very hard
not to imagine
my mother's corpse.
Before Eric
saunters back onto the line
and informs me
that my mother's fine,
I promise God
that if he lets my mother live
I will finish writing
my book.
Sequestering myself in my office
with Secret purring in my lap,
only emerging
for meals.
Michael's been great about
not interrupting me.
He's even been cooking
and doing all the errands
and fielding calls
from Roxie.
I've been so totally focused
on my manuscript
that when my mother calls
to ask me what I want for my birthday
she catches me by surprise.
“My birthdayâ¦?” I say.
“It's next week, dear. Had you forgotten?”
“Wowâ¦I guess I had⦔
Last year,
my birthday loomed over me
like a vulture waiting
to pick my bones clean.
But this year, I hadn't even
noticed it was coming.
“So tell me what you'd like,” she says.
“What have you been wishing for?”
“Oh, I don't know, Mom.
I don't really need anything⦔
But then it hits me,
in one of those blinding flashes.
“Actually, Mom,” I say, “there
is
something I've been wishing for.”
Then I pause for effect.
“Well? What is it, Holly?”
“I've been wishing you'd wear
that emergency necklace I got you.”
There's a silence
on the other end of the line.
Then
I hear a deep sigh.
“Darling,” my mother says, “are you sure
you wouldn't rather have a Mercedes?”
I crack up.
“I'm sure, Mom.”
“Then I'll wear your damn necklace.
But
not
when my beau comes over.”
“Your beauâ¦?!” I say.
“You've got a
beau?”
“Why yes, dearâ¦Ericâfrom next door.
He's a
lovely
man.”
My heart dances a little jig in my chest.
“That's incredible, Mom. I'm so happy for you!”
“I'm sort of robbing the cradle⦔ she confides.
“He's only seventy-five.”
And both of us burst out laughing,
as a river of relief flows through me.