“Here.” The girl handed me a little folded bag. “It’s a fresh one. Never been used.”
I was in a tin can with wings, and there was no way out. The plane took off then. I gripped the armrest as the jet tilted upward at a steep angle. I was now officially airborne. My body felt a little weightless, but it might have been because I was sitting on the buckle of my seat belt, which made my posterior go numb.
“Know what? You remind me of Eeyore.”
It was that kid again. How could anyone make chitchat at a time like this?
I said nothing to her, since I was busy concentrating on my terror, the vibration of my seat, and the roar of the jet. After she glared at me for a full minute, I asked, “Why do you say I remind you of Eeyore?”
“You’re wearing Eeyore clothes, and it’s almost spring where we’re going,” she singsonged as if she couldn’t imagine anyone so ill-informed.
I’d forgotten. If it’s nearing autumn in America it’s almost springtime in Australia. I’d barely thought of it. Perhaps the girl was right about my connection to Eeyore. Wait a minute. Did Eeyore even wear clothes?
“Just so ya know … taking off and landing are the two most treach—”
“Do you mean treacherous?”
“Yeah. That’s it. Those are the two most treach-er-ous parts of the flight.” The girl wiggled her eyebrows while continuing to thrash on the wad of gum. “If we were going to die, it would have been back there. Of course, we could also crash on landing.”
“Good to know. Thanks.” I continued to grip the armrests since I was somehow convinced that my gesture helped the pilots keep the plane in the air.
“Just so ya know, I’m Jenny.” The girl held out her hand. “What’s your name?”
“Mrs. Winter.” I let go of one of the armrests to shake her hand. “You may call me Lily.”
“So, why was it so important for you to get on this flight?” The dainty psychiatrist turned her big, round eyes at me again. “Talking about it might help.”
“Oh it’s a very long tale of woe. I’d hate to bore you.”
“Hey, what else have we got to do? It’s better than thinking about our plane catching fire and bashing into the sea.” Her finger made a little nosedive into her palm.
Cute.
“True.” But I feared the telling of my story would be my undoing. Where could I begin, anyway? Maybe with the visit I’d had with my mother. “Are you sure you want to hear this?”
She nodded her head with wild abandon.
“Well, okay. My dark story starts with a recent visit I made to my mother’s house. It’d been ten years since the last time I’d seen my mother.”
Jenny pursed her lips. “Nobody does that. Everybody has to see their mom, right?”
“Well, it certainly wasn’t my choice. But when I got to my mother’s house, the visit turned out to be as shocking as sticking my finger into a light socket.” I frowned. “Don’t ever do that, by the way.”
“I know.” Jenny rolled her eyes. “I’m not a
child
.”
“Right. Okay. Well, in my story I also meet a woman named Dragan.”
She giggled. “Sounds like dragon.”
“True. Dragan was my mother’s housekeeper, and believe me, her name fit her well.”
Jenny sat up poised, resting her cheek on her index finger. “I wanna know more.” She smacked her gum, waiting for me to go on.
“All right.”
Lord, be with me.
I rested my head back on the seat, inviting the memory of that infamous day into my life.
First a jumbled mess of sensations trickled in, making me shudder. Then mist burned my eyes, thinking of Mother’s notorious secret and a lifetime of deception. The smarmy residue from being in her house stole over me like a dark slithering fog. Soon that day—the one that changed my life—began to unfold in my mind, so intensely that the remembering and the telling of my story became one and the same….
Standing at my mother’s front door
, the seconds ticked by like a hundred frenzied clocks. I glanced around the old place, trying to ignore the negative self-talk in my head and Houston’s sweltering August heat, but it was no use. I’d already surrendered to both.
The old plantation-style house still looked the same—its pillars like guards and its darkened windows like eyes that always stared at me without really seeing. Hmm. Suddenly, empty nest with my Julie off in college felt lonelier than ever.
More seconds passed. Mother didn’t seem to be at home. Guess my thirty-minute drive across the city was in vain. But maybe that was best. It had been ten years, after all, and ten years was enough time for a goodbye to harden into something permanent. After hearing my pastor’s stirring message on reconciliation I had vowed to reach out to my mother—even though she didn’t want it—not just for my sake, but for Julie’s sake. For now, though, I’d have to let go of my promise.
As I turned to leave, a deadbolt unlocked behind me. Oh, no. The front door moaned its way open as if wailing over my arrival. I hugged myself.
A stranger stood in the doorway, looking as lost as I felt. “May I help you?”
“Does Iris Gray still live here?” My voice made a flutter. “I’m her daughter.”
The woman adjusted her red-rimmed glasses and blinked like the slow shutter speed on a camera. “But Mrs. Gray doesn’t have any children.”
“I’m afraid she does.” I smoothed my dark pantsuit. “I’m Lily Winter … her only child.”
“I’m Mrs. Dragan Humphreys.”
What an odd name. Sounded Hungarian or something. The woman wore a faded Hawaiian muumuu, and her hair looked like a tossed salad, which gave her a bedraggled air. As my gaze wandered downward, I saw that she wore tattered red flip-flops too. Well, at least they matched her red-rimmed glasses.
“Your mother never mentioned you.” The woman sort of impaled me with her words.
“What? Wait.” Jenny suddenly interrupted my story, waving her hands. “What did that dragon woman mean? Your mother
never
talked about you?” My tiny flying companion looked at me with her hand over her gaping mouth.
“I know. Hard to imagine. Even with our estrangement, it is shocking that my mother never mentioned anything about me.”
The girl took my hand and squeezed. “You poor thing.”
Where did Jenny come from anyway?
So much sensitivity in such a little package.
“Is that why you’re going to Australia? You’re running away from home?”
“No, adults don’t run away from home.” Although maybe she had a point.
“It’s a pretty good story so far. Does it have a happy ending?”
“I don’t know.” I sighed. “I’m still living the story.”
“Oh, yeah.” Jenny leaned toward me and drummed her fingers on the arm of the seat. “I’m not sleepy yet, so maybe you better tell me some more.”
“All right.
“My mother’s housekeeper, Dragan, pulled her glasses down to the tip of her nose. ‘I guess I can see the resemblance,’ she said to me. ‘You have the same gray eyes as your mother and that sad Mona Lisa smile.’
“I could suddenly see the woman’s eyes more clearly now. You’ll like this part, Jenny. Dragan’s eyes were like pale marbles. But one orb appeared slightly different from the other.”
Jenny leaned into the aisle. “Oww, that’s pretty creepy. Keep going.”
“Yeah, well, it made me uneasy trying to figure out the colors and which eye to look at. Finally, I just asked the woman, ‘Is my mother at home?’”
“She’s in the study.” Dragan paused and then opened the door wider.
I stepped inside. “So, are you my mother’s housekeeper?”
“Yes and no.” Dragan closed the door behind us. “Your mother and I have a special arrangement.” She placed her palms together, prayer-like. “I know how unorthodox this might sound, but Mrs. Gray pays me to be her friend.”
Normally I would have laughed at such a bizarre comment, but being in my mother’s house kept my bursts of emotion in check. “Oh? I see.” Most normal people wouldn’t be able to imagine hiring a stranger to be one’s friend—and yet in my mother’s case it was plausible. She’d always needed a friend more than a daughter.
Dragan seemed to study me for a reaction.
I smiled convincingly and trudged behind her toward the study. A trace of alcohol swirled in her wake, and when she glanced back at me, I saw the tapering of her eyelids.
Our footsteps clacked and flopped across the marble floor, making strange echoing rhythms through the entry. Even though I’d grown up in the house, I’d only visited the study occasionally. It had been my mother’s sanctuary, a place off-limits to animals and children. A place she retreated to when she could no longer tolerate the world. Or me. But perhaps my mother had softened over the years and the tendrils of compassion had attached themselves to her heart.
Dragan opened the door to the study and then, with the cadence of crisp snaps, she flip-flopped away down the hall. I tiptoed through the doorway, and all my good intentions threatened to scamper away like scared little mice.
I paused to get my bearings. The study looked the same—paneled walls accented with wainscoting, shelves of books, and an eclectic array of French Provincial furnishings. The afternoon light made phantoms on the walls, and like an enchantment, a grim and lonely feel still shadowed the place. Musty odors completed the overall anti-festive ambiance. I swallowed a chuckle and then hesitated mid-stride like characters do in cartoons, knowing that my mother’s disposition was as stagnant as her surroundings.
“I could hear your whispers through the vents … you and Mrs. Humphreys,” my mother said from behind one of the high-back chairs.
Her face was hidden from view, but the voice belonged to my mother. It was raspier than I’d remembered, but the brusque tenor sounded the same as a decade before. Suddenly my bones felt incapable of holding me up. I sensed it then—our meeting would be a farce, but without the comedy.
“What are you doing back there? Come here. I want to have a look at you,” came the voice.
I walked over to the chair opposite from my mother and sat down. I looked at my hands; they’d taken on a life of their own, strangling each other until they throbbed. “Hi, Mother. It’s been a long time.”
“Let’s see you. Your complexion has improved, and your long hair isn’t so straggly. But you’re still thin and pale. But of course, all that dark clothing you’re wearing makes the pallor more pronounced. In fact, you look ill. My doctors say I have a weakened immune system, so if you think—”
“I’m not sick.” I looked up at her. Mother’s eyes had faded some, but they were still as intense as ever. Streaks of iron gray ran through her dark hair, so many, in fact, that it was hard to know which color was more dominant, but the whole bundle was drawn up into a painful-looking bun. Her nose appeared more angled, and with her piercing stare, the whole effect was one of a fearsome eagle studying its prey.
My body shriveled like dried fruit in the hot sun. I felt desperate, almost reckless in my hopes for a chance to reconnect with my mother. I huddled down onto the chair, gripped the cushions, and waited for the judge’s decree.
“I’ve been expecting you.” My mother lifted a tiny glass of clear liquid—most likely schnapps—to her lips.
“You have?” I smiled, glad for any sign of goodwill.