Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
It doesn't take much to set off another one.
I might see a lost birthday balloon
tangled in the branches of our pepper tree.
Or maybe I'll catch a glimpse of Monkey,
sad-eyed but still grinning from his lonely
perch atop the toy box in Sam's room.
Or I might hear Michael, up in his studio,
absentmindedly whistling the tune from
the mobile that used to spin above her crib.
Some of these flash floods
feel purely hormonal,
as though it's simply crying season.
Some of them
feel considerably
more justifiedâ
like when
my editor Roxie calls
to put the screws to me.
Or when I glance at my face in a mirror
and see that I look more wrinkled
than laundry left in the dryer.
Or when my mother confesses that all those
aches and pains she's been plagued with lately
have been diagnosed as polymyositisâ
a muscle disease that makes her feel,
she says, like a voodoo doll being jabbed
with hundreds of white-hot pins.
Because my father died
when I was twelve
and my mother never remarried,
and because she lives alone in Cleveland
and all her friends are at a funeral today
(which she was in way too much pain to attend)
and because
I'm her only living relative
(except for Sam and my cousin Alice),
I'm
the one she speed-dialed just now
when she fell out of bed
and couldn't get back up off the floor.
So I'm the one
who's listening to
her shard-sharp screams.
I'm the one whose heart
is thrashing in my chest
like some wild, caged thing
while I try to get my mother
to calm down and hang up the phone
and call 911.
But because she's too scared
and in too much agony
to do what I'm telling her to do,
and because I didn't have the foresight
to find out her new next-door neighbor's
phone number,
I'm the one who's standing here
sweating clear through my T-shirt
while trying to figure out
how the hell to call 911 in Ohio
when you're dialing it
from California.
You
can't
call 911 in Ohio
when you're dialing it
from California.
So you've got to Google
the phone number of the police station
nearest your mother's house
and then force your stuttering fingers
to stop shaking long enough
for you to dial the number
and then pry open your locked jaw
so that you can ask the police
to send an ambulance
and then you've got to
call your mother back
to tell her help is on the way
and when
she doesn't answer
her phone,
you've got to
fling yourself onto your bed
and totally fall apart.
He finds me
quaking under the covers,
surrounded by an acre
of crumpled Kleenex.
When I tell him about my mother,
he gathers me into his arms,
strokes my back,
and presses his lips to the top of my head.
He doesn't tell me
not to worry.
He doesn't tell me
to cheer up.
He doesn't tell me
that everything will be okay.
And I love him for it.
Samantha comes home from
her chorus rehearsal
and, traipsing past
our open bedroom door,
she glances over
and sees us snuggling on our bed.
“Eeeooowww,” she says.
“Can't I leave you two alone for a
minute?”
Then she flounces off down the hall,
calling back to us over her shoulder,
“Remember, you two sex fiends:
no glove, no love.”
Michael and I
exchange a glance.
And both of us
burst out laughing.
Her attending physician's name is Dr. Hack.
I do not consider this
a good sign.
Dr. Hack calls me to tell me
that there is good news
and there is bad news.
The bad news is
that my mother's polymyositis
is advancing more rapidly than he'd like.
The good news is that he'll probably
be able to alleviate her pain
and maybe even reverse her symptoms
if he gives her
enough steroids
to kill an elephant.
The bad news is that taking
such megadoses of steroids might cause
my mother to experience “roid rage.”
They might even
cause her to have hallucinations
or manic episodes.
He says
one of his younger patients
got so crazed
that he bought an old car
and deliberately drove it into a tree
at forty miles an hour.
“But the good news⦔ Dr. Hack adds
with a shrill little chuckle
that sets my teeth on edge,
“the good news is that your mother
is probably way too sick
to get into that kind of mischief.”
And the worst news of all,
I think to myself,
is that you, Dr. Hack,
are my mother's doctor.
I tell her I'm going to hop on a plane
and come to visit her.
She tells me I'm going to do
no such thing.
When I protest,
she
forbids
me to come.
She assures me
that she's doing just fine.
She says her doctor's a dreamboat
and that he's taking excellent care of her.
She tells me that my place is at homeâ
with Samantha.
She reminds me that my daughter
will be leaving for college in the fall.
She says I need to enjoy every second
of her company while I still can.
She warns me
that once Samantha's had a taste of the world
she might flit home for a summer
like a migrating bird
or maybe breeze into town
for a few days now and then.
But after she's built her own nest,
mine will be emptier than a poor man's pocket.
Even though the season finale
of
Glee
is airing tonight,
and even though
she's absolutely dying to see it,
and even though
she's been planning to go
to a big finale-of-
Glee
party
with Wendy, Tess, and Laura,
a party which promises to be
the
social event of the television season,
Samantha has opted
to stay home instead,
so that she can make a funny Photoshopped
get-well card for her grandma
and bake a batch
of her famous butterscotch browniesâ
the ones her grandma loves
better than anything.
That's the kind of girl
Samantha is.
She doesn't rush
to the family room
to watch the TiVoed episode of
Glee.
She brings me up a tray
with a couple of warm brownies
and a frosty glass of milk
then hops onto my bed with me,
grabs the remote, and says,
“We're gonna watch
Roman Holiday!”
Because
she knows
it's one of my all-time favorites.
But
I
happen to know
that Samantha thinks
Roman Holiday
is terminally sappy.
So I say,
“If it's okay with you,
I'd rather watch the season finale
of Glee.”
And when she hears these words
a smile lights up her face
like a Fourth of July sky.
A memory of the very first time
Samantha smiled at me.
I mean
really
smiled.
She was just a couple of months oldâ¦
She was lying on her back in the center of our bed,
one arm raised above her head,
her first two fingers aligned
as though she was a tiny pope, blessing me.
I was sitting cross-legged at her feet
in a state of photo-snapping bliss,
her biggest fan,
her most loyal subject,
enthralled with the intensity of her gaze,
so sober and intelligent,
as though she was trying to send me
a telepathic message of the utmost importance.
ThenâI sneezed.
And her gummy grin opened before me
like the pearly pink gates
to my own private heaven.
My baby smiled at me.
She smiled!
And now that I'd stumbled on
the magic spell,
I would never stop chanting it.
“Achoo!” I said.
“Ahâ¦choo!
  Ahhâ¦
choooo!
    Ahhhâ¦
CHOOOOO!”
Samantha tells us
she'd like to be
by herself
when she opens themâ
those life-altering emails
that she received today
from all the college deans
of admission.
But before she sequesters herself,
Michael and I remind her
that what's
supposed
to happen,
will happen.
That everything happens for a reason.
That sometimes these reasons
don't present themselves
until many years later.
She smiles grimly,
not buying any of it,
then retreats
into her bedroom.
And when she closes the door,
the sound of it
echoes through the house
like the sharp crack of a gavel.
Alone
with her computer.
Michael and I
have been out here
for
ten eons.
Alone
with each other.
Her face is as blank
as an un-carved pumpkin's.
My heart
stops.
But then she beams
a thousand-watt grin
and says she got in
to the school of her dreams.
We hug! We scream!
We dance! We cheer!
We shout hoorah
for our darlingest dear!
But when she's not looking,
I dab at a tearâ
she'll be
three thousand miles away
from here.
But the last thing I want to do
is rain on Samantha's parade.
So I slip out into the backyard
to compose myself.
I close my eyes,
take a few deep breaths,
and when I open them again,
my gaze falls upon our pepper treeâ¦
When Samantha was a toddler,
Michael and I
read picture books to her for hours,
cuddling in the shade of that tree.
We promised her
we'd build her a tree house someday,
when the branches grew strong enough
to hold itâ¦
The three of us
whiled away summer afternoons
chasing each other
around the tree's thickening trunk,
weaving wreaths
from its feathery leaves,
watching the doves
build their nestsâ¦
When the tree
was tall enough,
Michael made a hand-painted swing
for Samantha.
He hung it
from a sturdy branch
and we took turns pushing her on it
till she learned how to pumpâ¦
When Sam was six, we taught her
how to climb into the tree's lap.
She often brought Monkey there
with
her
and sang him little songs she made up.
But on Samantha's seventh birthday,
when we told her that the tree was finally
big enough for a tree house, she began to cry
and begged us not to build it.
She'd gotten it into her head somehow
that the tree would be in agony
when the nails were hammered into it.
And no one could convince her otherwise.
So we never did build
that tree house for Samantha.
But, together, the three of us
built something better.