Wife-In-Law (13 page)

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Authors: Haywood Smith

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women

BOOK: Wife-In-Law
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She shot me another heartbreaking look.
The coach gave us a thumbs-up, then motioned us back to the bleachers. “Thanks, moms and dads. Time for us to huddle up.”
So I sat in the bleachers, snuggled in my mink, and watched my shivering child await the worst moment of her young life.
One by one, our batters came, and all of them hit the ball. Then it was Amelia’s turn.
Her shiny black helmet reflecting the lights, my precious darling walked toward the plate like it was a guillotine. Zach and Greg called instructions to her over the slight patter of applause and the daunted murmurs of the other parents.
Then Amelia turned and looked at all the people staring at her, and promptly disintegrated. Sheets of tears poured over her cheeks as her mouth trembled, soft sobs escaping, but she did her best to stay erect and face the ball.
Murmurs of sympathy and criticism buzzed from the other parents.
I rose to go rescue my daughter, but Greg tugged me back down. “She can do this,” he insisted. “Do you want her to run away whenever she faces something difficult?”
“I want her not to be traumatized at four,” I snapped, but he circled my shoulders to hold me in place.
“She’ll be fine,” he ground out as my own tears overflowed.
Kat and Zach looked away. “You can do it, sweetie,” Zach called to Amelia.
The first pitch went by her as she woodenly pivoted in its general direction, then looked back to us like a lamb to the slaughter.
Dear Lord, please help her.
Trembling visibly, she turned back toward the pitcher, then repeated the empty swing as the second pitch went by, her mind on everyone watching her instead of the ball. She probably couldn’t see it through her tears, but she stoutly remained in position.
Finally, the last pitch whizzed by, and they placed a ball on the tee. Amelia took another wooden swing, and the ball dribbled onto the ground not three feet from her as she dropped the bat and numbly walked toward first as if she was wearing full leg casts. The opponents’ shortstop scooped up the ball and easily tossed it to first.
“Out,” the opposing pitcher called.
That did it. Amelia started sobbing and ran into the dugout to cower in the corner.
I jumped up, and Greg tried to pull me back down by my coat, but nothing was going to keep me from my child. So I let him keep the coat and pulled free, then rushed to the dugout, where the coach had collected Amelia and was holding her in his arms, stroking her back as she sobbed. “It’s okay, sweetie.” Keeping her back to me, he raised a staying palm in my direction, then placed a silencing finger to his lips. “You did great for your very first time. Everybody has to start somewhere. Some of the people on the team had all last year to practice. It’s okay. They had to start out just like you, and they love it now.”
Her other teammates crowded around them, offering consoling touches and encouragement.
Chewing gum, one little girl stroked her leg. “Please stop crying, Amelia. I’ll give you my bubble gum if you stop crying.”
Not used!
To my relief, she proffered three pieces of wrapped gum. “See?”
Amelia actually stopped crying and studied the gum, something she’d never been allowed at home.
“It’s fruit flavored,” her little friend clarified. “Try one.”
Her breath still catching in soft spasms, Amelia unwrapped the pink cylinder, then put it in her mouth and relaxed against her coach’s shoulder, clearly enjoying the burst of sweetness.
The coach seized the opportunity to sit with her on the bench, still cradling her so she couldn’t see me and react.
All my instincts cried out for me to take her away and never let her come back, but the other children were being so sweet to her, and …
I sensed Greg’s presence before I felt him place my coat on my shoulders. “Come on, honey,” he said gently. “Mike’s got this under control. If she sees us, she’ll just start crying again.”
He was right.
I stepped back, then went behind the dugout, clutching my coat around me as Greg stroked my arms.
“I know, honey,” he soothed. “I know.”
Then, on the cold wind, I heard a familiar giggle and the sound of little-girl cheers and applause.
It was Amelia.
“Maybe this is why little girls have fathers,” I said to my husband.
“Maybe it is.” He kissed my hair, then led me back to the bleachers.
The minute Amelia was done, we took the kids to McDonald’s, and she acted as if everything was hunky-dory, carousing in the indoor playscape with the rest of her teammates amid the infectious sound of little-girl laughter.
Then I took her home and gave her a long, hot bath, and put her to bed.
After she fell asleep, exhausted from her ordeal, I did my best to talk Greg into letting her quit, but he still wouldn’t budge. “Hell, Betsy, we’re not torturing the child. It’s just T-ball.”
“You are torturing her,” I countered, “and I, above anybody, know how that feels. It was the same way with me when I was little. I hated for anybody to notice me, to criticize me. This is cruel.”
He pulled me into his arms. “No it’s not. Hard maybe, at first. I don’t want her to be a quitter. It will not serve her well in life.”
I stayed rigid in his embrace. “Please let her take ballet instead. That’s what she wants.”
“She’s four years old,” he said evenly. “How can she possibly know what she wants?”
But she did. I wanted to haul off and sock my husband for being so detached, and I might have, but what he said next stopped me.
“How about we tell Amelia she can take ballet if she finishes the season? How does that sound?”
It was a compromise, but at least she’d be earning something she really wanted. “Maybe. But I can’t bear to see her so upset again. Do you think it would hurt her feelings if I wasn’t there?”
Greg gave me a squeeze. “I don’t think so. I’ll be there, and Kat and Zach and Sada. As a matter of fact, Amelia might not get as upset. You two are so closely attuned, she was probably reacting to how upset you were too.”
Much as I hated to admit it, he had a point.
As it turned out, the promise of ballet went a long way toward easing Amelia’s stage fright—that, and my absence at the games. But Greg and Kat and Zach were always there to cheer her on—with plenty of bubble gum if she didn’t cry.
Sada turned out to be the ringer for the team, and Amelia survived, though not unscarred. To this day, she doesn’t like sports of any kind.
But in ballet, she was free and happy as a butterfly, and Greg’s penance was having to pay for her lessons and sit through all those recitals.
Turns out, I was the one who learned the most from T-ball. I learned that sometimes empathy isn’t the best thing, so little girls need their daddies too.
But if I had known what Greg was going to end up doing to both of us, I might have taken Amelia and headed for the hills, along with my unborn child.
 
 
H
aving two kids was like having one, times ten. My Emma turned out to be a wildwoman, into everything, all the time, from the minute she could inch her way to whatever it was she wasn’t supposed to touch. And across the street, Little Zach was like his mother, on testosterone. Kat and I were so busy that it seemed like the next time I came up for air, time had telescoped, and there I was, getting dressed for Amelia’s first day of kindergarten.
She and I had chosen a special outfit, just for the occasion: a pretty little floral jumper, a matching pink T, and Mary Janes.
When I’d asked Kat if she had anything special for Sada to wear, she’d said she didn’t want to put so much emphasis on what people wore, so Sada would pick out whatever she wanted, and let it go at that. At least the child would be clothed, for a change. At five, Sada still loved to escape and run naked at least once a week, which Kat considered a sign of a healthy body image.
At two, it was funny; at five, alarming, especially considering all the perverts that roamed the world. But get me off my soapbox on that one. I’d long since given up trying to argue with Kat over her parenting methods. All I knew was, Sada was clothed and well behaved on her days at my house.
“Hold still, sweetie,” I told Amelia as I brushed her thick, dark hair up at the crown. “I want to make sure your ponytail is just perfect.”
As always, Amelia did as I asked immediately.
“Look, Emma,” she said to her little sister, who was happily ransacking Amelia’s bottom dresser drawer. “See my outfit? I’m going to school, s-c-h-o-o-l.” She stroked the grosgrain bow we’d gotten to pin at the base of her ponytail. “It’s really kindergarten,” she said gravely, “but I don’t know how to spell that yet.”
“Milla,” Emma said, the closest she could get to “Amelia.” Unimpressed, she dove deeper to throw out more clothes.
As always, Amelia indulged her little sister. “Mama, how do you spell ‘kindergarden’?”
“That’s a tricky one,” I said as I finished her ponytail and clipped in the bow. “It sounds like kindergar
den,
but it’s spelled kindergar
ten.
K-i-n-d-e-r-g-a-r-t-e-n. It comes from the German.”
“Oh.” She would remember it. Amelia had been reading since she was four.
Her little sister Emma was another matter. She had no interest in letters or numbers. The only time my one-year-old sat still was when she finally, finally fell asleep at night, exhausted from a day of constant motion and exploring. If a book had more than three words on a page, she wiggled out of my lap and took off. In selfdefense, I’d emptied the whole house from the eyeballs down and put the medicine under lock and key. You have to pick your battles, and I had no intention of trying to hammer the curiosity out of her, but it sure was tiring.
Amelia inspected herself in the full-length mirror beside her closet. “Okay. I am ready to go to school.”
I gave her a hug. “Just enjoy yourself and relax. I’m sure you’ll have fun and meet lots of wonderful new friends.”
She smoothed her skirt, still checking her image. “But I don’t need any new friends. I have Sada.”
“Of course you have Sada.” Frankly, I was hoping they’d both branch out a little. “But you and Sada can make new friends too, and still be best buddies.”
Amelia looked at me as if I were simple. “If you say so.”
Translation: not on your life.
I loaded the baby and her car seat into the backety-back of my Grand Caravan, then strapped Amelia into hers behind me. Then we drove over to pick up Kat and Sada, who were late, of course. True to form, Sada had chosen a long-sleeved camo T-shirt, purple corduroy pants, and orange rain boots.
“Hey, ’Melia,” she said, completely unselfconscious as she climbed into the car seat Kat had put in the middle seat.
“Hey, Bets.” Kat heaved Little Zach and his car seat beside Emma, then secured it. Blowing her red bangs upward in exertion, she came up and sat beside me. “Can you believe it? D-day has arrived.”
“Yep.” I had no idea her combat metaphor would end up being prophetic.
When we got to school, I felt a lump in my chest when Kat and I teared up as our little girls waved good-bye, then walked hand in hand to their first day of school.
All the way home, Kat and I reminisced about their toddler years.
No sooner had I dropped Kat and Little Zach off, and gotten Emma down for her nap, than my phone rang.
My hello released a string of profanity from Kat that would put a sailor to shame.
“Whoa!” I guess even a Christian like Kat could relapse to her “old man,” as Saint Paul put it, given sufficient provocation. The question was, what had set her off? “Calm down. What’s the matter?”
“The freakin’ principal just called and said my daughter had
molested
a little boy in her class! Have you ever heard anything so absurd in your life?” Uh-oh. “That woman talked like I was some kind of trash, said I had to git down there right away so they could decide whether or not to notify the
authorities,
fer God’s sake.” She snorted in derision. “Authorities, my ass. Kin you look after Little Zach?”
“Sure. Drop him by on your way out.” Molested? This had to be some kind of awful misunderstanding. Sada was a free spirit, but the child didn’t have a sinister molecule in her body.
“Thanks.” Kat slammed down the receiver.
I’d barely hung up when the phone rang again. “Hello?”
“May I please speak with Mrs. Callison?” asked an exaggerated alto voice.
“This is she.”
“Mrs. Callison,” the affected voice drawled on, “this is Mrs. Bainbridge, the principal of Twelve Oaks Elementary School. Your daughter Amelia is a new student here?”
Obviously, or she wouldn’t be calling. “Yes. That’s correct.”
A jolt of adrenaline shot through me. Had something happened to Amelia? “Is she all right? Has something happened to her?”
“Not to her,” the principal said at an annoyingly deliberate pace, “but to her teacher.” Why wouldn’t she just get to the point? “There was an
in
-ci-dent with another student, and your daughter
bit
her teacher, Miss Wilkerson.”
What?
That was absurd. Amelia was the kindest child in creation. “Are you sure you have the right child, Amelia Callison?”
“Yes. We have the teeth marks to prove it,” the woman said without a shred of humor.
“There must have been some provocation,” I shot back. “My daughter has never bitten anybody in her life. What was that teacher doing?”
“Merely trying to discipline another student.” I sensed some defensiveness in her at last.
I put two and two together. Sada must have been the other child. Amelia was fiercely loyal to her best friend.
The principal grew stern. “We do not tolerate physical violence of any kind, Mrs. Callison,
especially
against our teachers. According to our rules, your daughter must be suspended immediately for three days, during which there will be a thorough investigation of the in-ci-dent, as well as your household.”
Our household? Of all the nerve! “You bet there’ll be an investigation,” I snapped. “That teacher must have done something awful to provoke my daughter to such behavior!” I struggled to regain my composure. Heart pounding, I managed a grim, “I will contact our attorney, then be there as soon as possible to get to the bottom of this.” I slammed down the receiver without saying good-bye.
I called our lawyer, who was in court for the rest of the day, so I left an urgent message with his secretary. Then I called Greg’s beeper and put in my cell phone number followed by 911, our signal for an emergency. I’d just hung up when the horn of Kat’s ancient station wagon tooted in the driveway.
Still furious, I charged out of the front door and motioned her to move the car so I could get out the minivan. “Park it! Amelia’s in the doghouse too.”
Their first day—their first
hour
—of kindergarten, and the two of them were already in deep doo-doo.
“We’ll have to take the babies and go to school together,” I instructed.
Kat nodded, then pulled over behind Greg’s empty space in the garage. When she got out with Little Zach, I saw she was wearing her best green church dress and the matching flats.
Incognito again, for Sada this time, not Zach.
By the time we finally got the babies in and hooked up, I was still so mad I could hardly speak.
“What happened with Amelia?” Kat asked as I backed out with a vengeance. “She’s a model child.”
“They say she bit her teacher,” I snapped, “but I know it had to be provoked.” I didn’t mention that it probably had something to do with Sada, because I didn’t have the facts.
At the corner of our street, I made sure nobody was coming, then ran the useless stop sign. “The nerve of those people, saying they were going to investigate our household.”
“Same here,” Kat fumed. “
Molested.
How the hell can a five-year-old little girl
molest
anybody?”
“Ridiculous,” I told her. “Did you call your lawyer?”
“We don’t have a lawyer,” Kat said. “Did you call yours?”
“Yeah, but he was in court. Figures.” I turned onto the street that led to the school. “Greg was out of pocket too,” I told her, “but I left my number on his beeper with a 911.”
“I couldn’t get Zach either,” Kat said. She peered out the window, indignant. “Good thing the both of us have each other.”
“Yeah.” But I wasn’t sure what help it would be to have Kat on my side when it came to school authorities. Kat was against authority of any kind, except for God.
“Molested,” she muttered. “Sada might whack somebody who crossed her, but she’s hardly a sexual being, for God’s sake.”
Undisciplined, yes. Sexual, no.
We approached the school in tense silence, but when I pulled into a visitor’s spot, Kat said, “You better go into that meeting with me, in case I start to lose it with that officious idiot of a principal.” She pointed to me. “I need you fer a witness.”
“With both our kids in trouble,” I told her, “I doubt having each other as witnesses will do much good, but I’m there for you.”
“Good. And you kin count on me,” she said.
Ten minutes later, we sat holding our babies in half-sized chairs outside the principal’s office.
The female equivalent of James Earl Jones finally opened the office door. She looked down at us over her ample, tightly controlled bustline. “Mrs. Rutledge?” she said in a deep, resonant alto.
Kat stood up. “That’s me.”
The woman frowned. “I’m Mrs. Bainbridge, the principal,” she announced as if she was declaring herself queen. “Would you please step inside?”
Kat bowed up. “I’d like to bring my friend, Mrs. Callison, in with me, if you don’t mind.”
The principal arched a brow. “I’m afraid I do mind. These proceedings are meant to be confidential.”
Kat advanced on the woman, motioning behind her back for me to follow. “My lawyer wasn’t able to attend,” she lied, “but he advised that I have a witness present. Mrs. Callison has agreed to act as one.”
The principal rolled her eyes, but retreated to her desk. “Very well. Normally, our counselor would be present as well, but she’s in testing.” She motioned to two adult-sized chairs facing her desk. “Please be seated.”
We eased down, both of us balancing cranky babies who should have been at home napping.
“Mrs. Rutledge,” the principal began with authority, “are there any unusual practices in your home?”
“Everything in our home is perfectly wholesome and natural,” Kat replied with a glare.
The principal sized her up. “Have you ever had any reason to suspect that your daughter might have been sexually molested?”
“What?” Kat asked, aghast. “Why on earth would you ask me such a question?”
“Sexual abuse and incest cut across all incomes and occupations,” the principal stated. “Such questions are awkward, but necessary in
in
-ci-dents of this nature.”
“And exactly what is the nature of this
in
-ci-dent?” Kat demanded. “You still haven’t told me what happened.”
The principal shot a disdainful glance at me, then leaned forward to reveal, “Your daughter went behind an easel with one of her male classmates and displayed her private parts to him. When he … laughed, half the class came to see what was going on, and your daughter paraded in front of them with her panties on her head.”
For heaven’s sake. So she dropped her pants! Big deal!
I clamped my lips to keep from smiling.

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