Authors: Tina Welling
Bo says he'll squeeze the orange juice while I get ready for bed. I wait for him under my comforter, propped against pillows, wearing my longest, fluffiest flannel nightgown. I discarded the notion of staging a scene with lacy straps against bare shoulders shyly peeking above my covers. I really don't feel good.
“Open up,” Bo says, coming into my room. He sits on my bed and presents a dropper full of echinacea.
“No icky-natia. I've had enough.”
“Open up,” he says sternly.
I do and he squeezes the awful tonic into my mouth, while I curl my tongue way back out of reach. He quickly hands me the freshly squeezed juice. I hold a mouthful and bathe my tongue in it, trying to erase the stringent taste of the tonic. I shudder.
Bo smiles slightly with his eyes cast downward, screwing the top back on the brown bottle.
“You enjoyed that,” I accuse him.
“I wish I could give you some more.” He stretches crossways on the bed over my lower legs and plants his elbow, resting his head on his hand. “It has to do with having some noticeable effect on youâgood or bad,” he says.
I know exactly what he means, but I act obtuse. “Give some to Caro. In fact, give her the whole bottle.” I pop out two red Sudafed pills from their foil and chase them with my juice. I'm only a faithful believer in natural medicine when I'm feeling good.
“It isn't easy to have an effect on Caro. You're more fun.” He shakes the bottle menacingly.
“I think you're in love with Caro.” My voice sounds querulous, as if I'm challenging him. Part of me wouldn't mind picking a fight. I'm kind of irked by that woman's remark about Bo spending a lot of time with Caro. Can't be work. How much stock do you buy in the dead of winter?
“Men aren't in love with Caro. They're obsessed by her.”
“Are you obsessed?” I grab Tessa's cherry bark cough syrup from the bedside table and take a slug.
“Once I was, for the heck of it.”
I feel like acting superior. “I don't believe you're that much in control,” I say. It was irritating to take him to
my
friend's party and have him know more people there than I did. And all the way home, while I'm ripping into the Kleenex box catching my sneezes, he tells me everyone's story.
“Besides, I know you only went to the party because Caro has family visiting.”
“Believe what you want, Suzannah.” Now Bo sounds irked. He rises from the bed.
“Sit back down.” I pat the covers and look apologetic. “Talk to me till my Sudafed kicks in.” I don't want him leaving me alone here, sniffing and restless. “Tell me about Caro's visitor.”
He sits on the edge of my bed. “This guy Caro's taking everywhere? His name's Benj? Her older brother?”
“You sound like an up talker.” I pitch my voice high. “Like, you know, everything has to end in a question?”
“Well, something's going on.” Bo holds up the tincture bottle and swings it by its rubber squeeze top. “Something icky.”
“Now you sound like meâ
icky
.”
Bo shoots off my bed again. “Sick people are so goddamn self-absorbed. Zannah, I can't talk to you. I'm leaving.”
“Talk to me. I'll behave. Please?” I know I can't sleep yet and my eyes are too watery to enjoy a book.
Bo stares down at me disgustedly, and I wonder if he can read my mind. He says, “Shit.”
I hear him in the kitchen rinsing my juice glass before he slams out the back door. I try to imagine being married to Bo and complaining about him to my women friends. They would say, “He rinsed the glass before slamming out? My God, what a dreamboat.”
After turning out my light, I snuggle deep into my comforter. I follow the sound of Bo's Suburban backing out the drive, straightening onto the road, accelerating toward his house. I try to roll over in my long flannel nightgown, but between the flannel bedsheet and the flannel duvet cover I feel stuck like one of those felt cutouts arranged on a cloth-covered board used in Sunday school lessons. I'm not going
anywhere
unless someone peels me off the sheet and moves me.
From my imagination I pull out my favorite sleep inducer, a fantasy from another biography I'm reading about the Countess Cissy Patterson. It involves Cal Carrington, her Wyoming outlaw hunting guide, andâsome sayâdark and feisty lover. Cal looks remarkably like Bo in my version of the story. Lately, I've been changing things around. Cissy's French maid does not rush back east in fright after her first day in Wyoming, as she did in reality. She leaves the dude ranch, all right, but only goes to town. There, she stays with Rose Crabtree at the Crabtree Hotel on the corner of the square, and learns English with a flirty accent. In my version she looks remarkably like me. With the help of the local cowpokes, she learns to ride, to dance the Western swing, to gamble at the Wort. Then, having become an accomplished Wyoming woman and having mastered Rose Crabtree's chokecherry pie recipe, the French maid goes after Cal Carrington. And most nights before I fall asleep, she gets him.
Â
I wake up the next morning surprised to feel so good. I recall Bo leaving in a benign huff last night, which he will not hold against me. Still, I need to apologize. One of these days I hope I can ask him to a party without canceling out the invitation with a scene designed to turn him away. I decide to go into town for cappuccino and eggs Benedict at Shade's Café. I hear steady dripping from my eaves as I lie in bed, so I know the snow is melting and the roads will be safe. I shower and dress and stuff two books and my journal into my backpack.
Tessa claims she “manifests” parking spots by visualizing the exact empty space she wants. I picture the space right in front of Shade's, next to the alley, so I can easily pull in and out. While I'm at it, I visualize the table I want, too. The small, round one smack in the middle of the big window.
I don't get the parking spot, but I do get the window seat. I order my eggs with yolks hard as rocks. “Bounceable,” I call around the corner to Kim, who is cooking today. While I'm spooning foam off my double cap and eating it like ice cream, I spot Caro with a man about to go into a gallery across the street. This must be her visiting brother. He halts Caro from behind with one hand on top of hers, grasping the doorknob, and his other hand holding her low on her abdomen. He says a few words in her ear; then they both disappear into the shop.
Thirty minutes later, I glance up from my reading and see the two of them dart across the wet street, clotted with snow that has fallen off passing cars. They don't see me until they boisterously push each other into Shade's. My table is too small for three, I gratefully realize, but other tables are available. They are as relieved as I am, I'll bet, because Caro immediately begins a case for not disturbing me and the books I've spread around.
“Don't move a thing, Suzannah. Benj and I have business to discuss before I drive him to the airport. Oh, this is my brother. He's here from Oklahoma.”
“Where in Oklahoma?” I ask, as if I could name a single town there. I'm like my family used to be about Wyoming when I first moved here, mix it up with all the other square Western states.
Benj says, “Pierce. Small place.”
“Ah,” I say knowingly, as if I'm about to ask if that little drugstore on the corner still serves those great cherry phosphates. I may be picturing Kansas for all I know. Around and around my head march Bo's words,
Something's going on. Something icky.
Benj looks older than Caro, maybe by as much as eight years or so. Tall, slender build. The most arresting thing about him is the contrast of his light gray eyes against his long, slightly curling black hair. Caro, also, has gray eyes. Though they don't share the exact same shade, they look out of those eyes the exact same way. As if they had a parent who often recited, “Don't take any shit. Ever.”
While Benj lists the places Caro has shown him, Caro eases toward the order counter. I pretend to listen to him while picturing a rough-talking father who kept his distance, maybe traveled a lot. “You take any shit, you'll just smell bad.” Two sets of gray eyes listened carefully.
“Benj,” Caro urges, “get in line.”
“There is no line, Caro.” Benj turns toward me and switches his smile on again. I begin to think about what happened when the rough father left town and the weak mother couldn't do a thing about how her children spent their time together.
The trouble with my new life since leaving the blandness of marriage with Erik and teaching school is that my newly awakened imagination soars out of bounds. Once I overheard someone discussing artificial legs in a restaurant, and my mind set off into picturing a policeman shooting somebody over and over in that artificial leg, trying to stop them from escaping a crime scene. Emptied his gun and still the guy kept walking away.
Caro tries to overhear what Benj is saying to me while she gives her order. It's nice someone is listening to him. I just want out of here. I gather up my belongings, jabber some polite words to Benj, wiggle fingers at Caro, and pull the door behind me before both my arms are in my coat sleeves. On the sidewalk I wrestle with my books and clothes. “Please,” I beg myself, “act normal.” From the counter they can easily see me out here. My coat half dragging on the ground, backpack spilling its contents. Lips moving, giving directions to myself. But I'm unnerved: Benj is Caro's brother like Heathcliff was Catherine's.
T
his morning I cross-country ski around the base of Saddlestring Butte and encounter the heart-shaped tracks of elk, left like valentines in the snow. The name of Bo's ranch, Crossing Elk, originated from this heavily used game trail, swagging down the butte to the creek bank below. Bo says by winter's end the snowy trail will be paved a foot and a half wide in elk droppings. Right now droppings are still sparse, but definitely scattered along this particular route as if a herd of Hansels and Gretels was marking their way home.
Alongside the creek I pole myself slowly, eyes on the ground looking for signs. I become hypnotized, puzzling out the prints and scat. By the time I turn back after one of these outings, I am filled with calm.
Earlier this week, when I told my father on the phone about my new hobby, he said, “Hobby? That's not how your mother and I thought of it when we caught you in your crib with your diapers off playing with your
scat
, as you like to call it.”
“
Caught
me? You sound as if I'd been committing a criminal offense.”
“It was pretty damn offensive to me,” he said.
I bend low over a twist of coyote scat prickly with fur and hope I'll come across prints of the chase. Farther up the creek, I see dirt heaped over the snow and realize there was no chase. The coyote just dug underground for his dinner last night. Vole, most likely.
I'd meant to tell my father about my latest sighting: tiny paw prints in fresh snow that suddenly disappeared in a flutter of feathery wing impressions. The drama of a raptor capturing a small rodent. Sometimes, even though I may laugh at my father's remarks, I feel him sucking out my psychic energy till I am nearly flat. The image of a vampire comes to mind.
I was determined on the phone that night to be the one to end our call for a change. I said, “Dad, I have to go now, but I wanted to cheer you with the news that tracking has finally made something of a scientist of me.” He has accused me of being the enemy of rational thought with a one-sided interest in the arts.
My father answered, “Yeah? You saying I should have been cheered about hosing down a baby scientist and her crib that Saturday morning?”
I gave up, because he never does. I bet my father has no memory of talking to my mother in just that exact way. Now my mother doesn't either.
I ski to an area tamped flat by the many webbed prints of Canada geese. From reading descriptions of autopsies done on Alzheimer's patients, I picture areas of my mother's brain looking like this, pathways knotted into a tangle of webbed prints.
I ski across the frozen creek and up the other side to a spot where a warm spring keeps ice from forming. A dozen mallards and the dazzling black-and-white of the Barrow's goldeneye crowd the tiny pool. Once, I saw a family of four otters lunch on fish beside the creek here, crunching bones. Today, I notice the otters haven't used their slide on the bank since the tiny hard pellets of graupel snow fell a few days ago. No fresh scat either. I worry about this family of otters and I worry about my own family. We are separating from one another in our various ways. What will become of us? What will hold us together?
Excrement seems to be a family theme lately. I think of the adult diapers my dad has had to purchase recently for my mother. Perhaps this explains his inability to honor my interest in tracking. And Beckett, graduating midyear with his associate's degree from LCCC, alerted me that all his classmates were depositing moose pellets into the dean's palm when he shook their hands while passing out diplomas. By the end of the ceremony every pocket of Dean Coates' suit bulged. He must have smelled a bit odd, too.
Delinda promised to come but, typically, canceled at the last minute. Thinking now about Beck's distance during my weekend visit, I wonder if he wanted to punish me for being more attentive than Delinda, because years ago I may have confused the issue in his young mind. Whenever Delinda failed to show up or call as promised, I offered treatsâice cream or a movieâto help fill the blank space in his life as if I were the one responsible for it.
I ski back to the cabin and find Bo in the kitchen, fixing food for our “neighborhood potluck,” as he still calls it. “Been shit tracking again?” he asks by way of greeting.
“Yep. What are you cooking? Smells good in here.”
“Potato soup.”
“Yum.”
I haven't talked to Bo since I saw Caro and her brother in town a couple days ago, except to phone with an apology for my bad behavior, which I blamed on my cold. As I strip off my gaiters and boots, the washer finishes its final spin cycle. I switch Bo's load from the washer to the dryer. He has begun adding my laundry to his to make up a full load. I have mixed feelings about this blurring of our belongings. Mostly, I am so wrapped up in my jewelry designs these days that to be spared brushing my own teeth would be welcome.
“Bo,” I call into the kitchen, “thanks for washing the blue bathroom rug.”
He turns off the kitchen faucet. “I didn't. I washed the white one.”
I hear potato slices thud one by one as he slices them into the soup pot.
“What else did you wash with it?” I holler back.
“Flannel sheets. Your new blue plaid⦔ The hollow thumps of falling potato slices halt.
Bo appears in the laundry room doorway. “I do the laundry. How come you're in here?” Paring knife in hand, he defends his position in the household. My household.
I never say the obvious. I never say because it's
my
house,
my
laundry. It seems unfair to express the unequivocal in an argument.
Bo picks up the rug, holds it by its fringe, and aims it toward the lightbulb overhead. “That's not blue. That's practically white.”
“It's blue. Once it was completely white.”
“This is white with a shadow across it. The blue is a
pigment
of your imagination.”
We never get any further than this. I laugh at his silly wit, marvel over his even, good natureâdespite provoking him like I did the night of my coldâand it's over. But I never quite get to any points about my rights around here, his lack of them. Yet, too, from the kitchen, the aroma of diced onions sautéed in butter breezes past my nose. It's clouding up outside, the wood burning in the stove gives a wild whine, reminding me of the rough-legged hawk soaring earlier over the snowy butte. I don't have to eat dinner alone. I don't even have to think it up or cook it.
My laughter winds down into a smile that matches Bo's. We stand there and just grin. Really, I feel such contentment. Euphoria bubbles up, then simmers like Bo's soup will soon, and I place the shadowy blue laundry on the back burner of my mind.
Bo returns to slicing potatoes. I check the mail he brought and use his pocket knife to unwrap a box from Rishashay. Brand-new silver bead caps and fancy spacers. I carry them to my work table.
During my marriage it never occurred to Erik or me that anyone but me would handle the laundry. Traditions change. Now even my father is doing laundry. Dad said he found a box of cookies in the tub of the washing machine last week, washed, rinsed, and spun. “But that's okay,” he assured me, deeply tucked into his denial. “We're doing fine.”
I can't document this, but I believe there was a plateau in my life at which I made a choice whether I, too, would fall sick, give up, and roll downhill or gather myself together and trudge on up. I remember one winter in Findlay, wishing I could stay in bed forever. For several weeks I carried a low-grade fever, vaguely ached from head to toe, and was smeared with a faint rash, like strawberry jam on white bread. The doctor said, “Maybe scarlatina. Maybe nothing.”
Then it was over. I had begun to make jewelry. As I grew stronger, beadwork took over my life, as if it were a fierce disease itself. I got healthier, happier, even sharper in my thinkingâI swear, my IQ rose twenty points.
Tessa said that was my Saturn return. “How old were you?” she asked.
“Thirty-five,” I told her.
Like a game-show host, she congratulated me for giving the right answer. “Exactly.”
An ego crisis, she explained. We each get one. We reach the peak of our ego's arcâusually between thirty-five and fortyâand decide there and then whether we rip through outer dressings and soar on upward or follow the curve back down to death.
Bo's soup pours into my bowl like ladles of ivory velvet. It's speckled with fresh dill and parsley. He bought baguettes from the Bunnery. Split, buttered, and toasted them beneath the broiler. Lettuce this time of year is not green; our salad looks more as if Bo just laundered the white leaves with a green sheet. For dessert, I baked lemon bars. Our dinner is monochromatic, like the view out my windows: all shades of white.
“I met Caro's brother the other day,” I say, once I come up for air from my potato soup. “You felt something wasn't rightâ¦.”
“Never mind,” Bo says. “It wasn't anything.”
He begins clearing our dishes off the table and carrying them to the sink. What's his rush? He didn't even finish his soup. I grab another piece of bread as the plate flies past. Bo has a heavy hand with butter, which I love.
“When Dickie's on these long trips, we usually see a lot more ofâ”
Bo interrupts. “Caro made reservations for the two of us at Chico Hot Springs this weekend.” He crosses to the stove.
“I've never been to Montana.” For one wild moment, I misunderstand. I think “the two of us” means Bo and me. Really, I need a fuller social life. Sometimes I lose my place in this odd triangle Caro and Bo and I have going.
“She wants to check out some cutting horses in Livingston.” Bo stands with his back to me, spooning soup into his mouth. I knew he couldn't have eaten enough.
I keep picturing how Caro acted as if Benj were a daddy, safe to flirt with, yet looking at him worriedly for approval. Kind of flirty, kind of anxious. Perhaps I can offer Caro a wider cushion of tolerance now, knowing there's complications in her life. Still, reservations at a hot-springs resort just to buy horses?
I brush buttery toast crumbs from my fingers and tune into Bo, who is talking about O.C.'s upcoming knee surgery.
“Trouble is, O.C.'s surgery is scheduled this week and he won't be able to take care of Hazer. So I told O.C. I'd ask you how you felt about having a pup around a few days.” Bo is pouring the leftover soup from the pot into a plastic storage bowl.
“Why doesn't O.C. ask me himself?” I knew O.C.'s knee was giving him trouble and surgery was a possibility. He never quite recovered from his pup knocking him down.
“You mean a direct one-on-one, face-to-face interaction?” Bo looks at me wide-eyed over his shoulder. “How the hell you think a family can keep any ties going that way? I'm a little worried about Pop not phoning one of the aunts first to ask me to ask you.”
“Books call that
codependent behavior
.” I walk to the sink with my soup bowl and silverware. Bo seems to feel he has to be chatty for a bit longer until he's certain I'm not going to break into the first available space with my version of things between Caro and Benj.
“Codependent behavior
defines
a family. You think Pop and I would have anything at all going on between us if we didn't take on each other's business? You think I'd
choose
to talk to the old coot for
fun
?” Bo scrapes the last of the soup from the sides of the pot with a spatula to get every last drop. When he's finished, the soup reaches the very top of the bowl; if there had been another spoonful, Bo would've had to eat it.
I start the water for tea and rinse the bowls.
“We make up stuff like this to keep us hanging together.” Bo rummages in a drawer for a plastic lid. “See, you'll give me an answer, I'll pass it on to O.C., he'll have another message for you, maybe one for the aunts so I get to call them, too, then call O.C. again.”
“
Triangling
, the books call that.” Slow times at the bookstore I educate myself in the relationships section and try to figure out my life.
“You bet. The family that triangles together, hangs together.” Bo snaps the lid on the plastic bowl. I admire his genius for finding the exact size bowl to fit leftovers. I usually have to dirty two because I've guessed wrong.
Bo brings over the salad bowl and dumps the leftovers in the sink. He pushes the lettuce down the drain, while I gather potato skins, left on the counter, and toss those into the sink.
The sink fills with murky water. Potato skins and lettuce begin to float.
“Well, shit,” Bo says. “Look what we've done again.”
“Oh, heck.”
Bo uses the ladle to bail out water from the sink into the soup pan. Then grabs handfuls of lettuce and potato skins.
“I would love to have Hazer here, but I think O.C. should have asked me himself.”
Bo runs to his car for his toolbox. I convince him when he returns to let the sink go until we finish dessert. “Our tea's ready.”