Home Leave: A Novel (2 page)

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Authors: Brittani Sonnenberg

BOOK: Home Leave: A Novel
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You see, at fourteen, Elise had finally gathered her courage. Paps and Gran had driven back to Arkansas that morning, and Elise had come home from youth group with fire in her eyes. I watched her sitting at her desk, hunched over a Bible, going over Psalm 10, verses 12 to 15, with a yellow highlighter.

Arise, O L
ORD
!

O God, lift up Your hand!

Do not forget the humble.

Why do the wicked renounce God?

He has said in his heart,

“You will not require an account.”

But You have seen, for You observe trouble and grief,

To repay it by Your hand.

The helpless commits himself to You;

You are the helper of the fatherless.

Break the arm of the wicked and the evil man.

Seek out his wickedness until You find none.

Then she prepared herself to deliver the revelation. Not with the usual half-nervous, half-delighted glances at the mirror that generally characterized her preparations (for she was a great beauty, from the age of ten). I don’t believe she even looked at the mirror once. Just changed into her pajamas, read the psalm out loud (slaying me, of course, on the fourteenth verse: “But You have seen, for You observe trouble and grief”), and marched into the kitchen, like she was going off to war.

Ada didn’t see it coming. She and Elise often had little night chats, about boys at school or what had happened that day. So she just cut Elise a piece of chess pie, then one for herself.

When Elise pushed back the pie and told Ada in a cold, flat voice what had been going on with Paps, I watched Ada closely, delirious. Finally. Finally. We would be a normal home again. I waited for my beloved to sit down in shock, to reach for Elise, to gasp, to cry. Anything. I wanted anything but what happened: Ada’s eyes getting small and hard, and her back stretching just as straight as Elise’s. And then in that same cold, dead, even tone, which they’d never used with each other before, I heard Ada say it: “You shouldn’t tell such tales, Elise.”

She said it again. And to my surprise, Elise, who would cry at the end of every other
Lassie
episode, or when Ada played Bach on the piano, stayed completely still. If anything, her face froze in a terrible small smile, not unlike Charles’s pursed grimace, after a long pause in which it looked cracked open, like a face peeled from a skull, or a house after it’s burned. No tears, no sound. Just that look of raw wreckage, then frozen tundra.

I hated Ada for that. It wasn’t until years later, when Ada began to mumble her own ugly memories of Paps’s deeds at my walls, that I could even begin to think of forgiving her, and even then I still couldn’t, not all the way. Ada couldn’t see what was happening to her daughter because she had willed herself into blindness when she was little. Still, she had a choice that night. She had what I would have given anything for: the ability to intervene. For a second, she glimpsed that chance. Then a little child’s terror stole over her, and her face closed up. Ada, who’d taught Peter’s denial of Christ in Ivy’s Sunday school class just three weeks earlier.

*  *  *

There’s one human quality that I’ve never come close to grasping. How they manage to wring beauty from their pain, or even throttle it until joy comes out. It’s perverse. But I’ve seen it a million times. The sadder things got here around that time, the tighter the family’s harmony grew when they sang Baptist hymns, especially Ada, Elise, and Ivy, like they were reaching out for each other, desperate, protecting each other with their voices, unable to do it any other way.

Or the laughter. I’m telling you, on the very worst days, when Charles was treating Ada worse than a stranger or a servant, when Paps was up to no good, and Ivy was drawing into herself like an overgrown forest, and Elise had turned her back on her mama and reinvented herself as a religious nut, those were the times when high giggles escaped at the dinner table, and Dodge’s uncanny imitation of Mr. Hardy mowing the lawn made Elise wet her pants. I never could fathom it. The sudden shining, the addictive cascade of laughter—easing everyone and tiring them out with joy until the clouds drew in again, just as dark and just as close.

*  *  *

Later on in her life, Ada took to watching
Law & Order
. At first I was skeptical, but then I got hooked too; who wouldn’t? She’d watch four, five episodes a day, and dream about them too, her face taking on the dismay and horror in sleep that it had in front of the screen. It was even more extreme when they’d have marathons a few times a year. She’d barely turn off the TV then, just microwave some Lean Cuisine and watch them catch the crook.

At first I was ashamed that that was the only noise inside of me, after so many years of piano practicing and butter sizzling and whispered prayers, but then I grew to like it, started feeling like those detectives and the funny folks on
Frasier
were my real inhabitants, just as Ada must have felt like they were her friends, or family, even. But I knew it was lazy, too. I saw how Ada breathed a sigh of relief as soon as the show got started and her mind could switch to their troubles, not hers. Is it cruel to say I begrudged her that happiness? Perhaps. But in the end I felt like she had her own crime stories to work out, so why waste time watching other ones get solved?

Of course it’s not as simple as that. I know: I’m no prefabricated house you plunk down on a lot, dumb as its own faux timber. It was just that Ada would get so close to it sometimes, the truth I mean, or some kind of solution, ugly as it was. I’d see it in her eyes, hear it in her quickening breath. She might be looking up from washing her face in the bathroom, or entering the living room from the hallway, and there it would be: a stark realization of former events, of what they signified and how they might have played out differently. It was as though all her failures were seated on the couch, chatting with each other, pouring sweet tea and eating cheese straws, like the ladies in bridge club used to every fourth Wednesday. Ada’s face would take on a kind of rapture. Then it would close with shame and she would back out of the room or march to that TV and flip it on, until all the failures shrugged at each other and took their leave, hugging each other at the door, trying to hug Ada, who just turned a cold shoulder and turned up the volume.

*  *  *

In the last few years before Elise moved Ada out (and, in so doing, sentenced me to my own slow death, like a spinster aunt whose final prospect has just taken the last train out of town), Ada and I would religiously watch the six o’clock news. Monstrous, most of what they’d show on there. But I recall one clip that caught my attention, a report on a new educational effort called “No Child Left Behind.” I don’t presume to grasp politics, but I loved the name of that program, and all the children they would show hard at work in those schools, frowning over their math books, the walls trying to whisper the formulas to them, they loved them that much.

And that’s what I always thought about Ada, until the very last day: How could y’all leave this child behind? They all did, one by one. Elise was as good as gone after Ada called her a liar. Ivy departed the day she picked up a guitar, even if she lived at home until she was twenty-five. The boys went off to college. Charles died of a sudden heart attack while bowling, as I said, at the age of sixty. Typical of him, to bow out like that, so painlessly. I realize I’m being unfair.

After her initial five-year boycott, Elise was the only one who called regularly. She had every right to hate Ada, and in some ways, I think she did. There was a chronic tightness in her voice, an accusation that wouldn’t lift, which joined the guilt echoing in Ada. Not that Ada would admit to that perpetual trial, worse than
Judge Judy
. Often, Ada treated Elise with a seasoned criminal’s wariness and contempt. In her last years, Ada wanted peace, and the sight of Elise just stirred too much up.

For a while, after Charles’s death, though the kids were worried about her living alone, Ada bloomed, as though she had a new lover. But I knew better: it was the pure delight of not having to explain herself anymore. Charles was a faithful husband, didn’t drink, and came home each night at seven. But he was fanatic about saving money. The one time Ada asked him if they might go out for supper, he wouldn’t speak to her through the whole dinner, which just made her dreamed-of steak taste like sand. After his passing, she deposited flowers on his grave weekly and went shopping. She bought lots of clothes, some in leopard print. She left me for weeks at a time and returned smelling like suntan lotion and margaritas.

That’s when I felt sure things would get solved. I don’t even know how I thought it would happen, exactly, maybe something like they have on televangelist shows, the witnessing, “come to Jesus” part of the service, where people fall on their knees before the rest of the congregation and sob. I pictured it taking place at Christmastime, after the grandchildren had gone to bed and the grown children had loosened themselves with a little wine.

I wasn’t sure who would go first, but I tried to catalyze the chemical reaction, tried to make the lighting appear both reassuring and urgent, kept the room at a temperature where they wouldn’t get too sleepy, tried to take on the colors and mood I’d had for each of their Christmases as small children, so that their memories would stir and they’d begin to speak.

Instead, they avoided one another’s eyes and played with the toys that had been opened by their own children earlier that day, went to the kitchen and made coffee, or turned on the ball game. And what would they have said to one another, anyways? I never knew what happened to the people who confessed their sins or shames on-screen, if they went and had a burger after the service, or sex, or found a VCR and watched the tape of their moment of fame and honesty, over and over. What I’m trying to say is maybe it wouldn’t have done any good, or maybe it wouldn’t have lasted.

But they each dreamed about the unsaid that night. I spied with all my eyes, and sure enough, there was Elise in a river, trying to drown her mother and resuscitate her at the same time; Ivy, swinging at snakes in the ravine; Dodge, dreaming about long-dead dogs; Grayson, dreaming about his father yelling at him on the football field; and Ada, dreaming about sitting on her father’s lap, her legs concrete so she couldn’t move.

*  *  *

My Ada. My Elise. Elise couldn’t get far enough away from Vidalia, or, let’s face it: me. My smells, my rooms, my locks. Charles had decreed that she would go to a Baptist college in Mississippi. Blue Mountain College was near Tupelo, just an hour up the Natchez Trace Parkway, but you would have thought the girl was in the North Pole for all we saw of her. Charles shouldn’t have worried about Elise losing God once she left Vidalia. Soon as she hightailed it out of town, the only father she paid attention to was the Lord.

At first she made excuses about not coming back for Thanksgiving (exams) or Christmas (traveling with her contemporary Christian band, Jericho!), until finally she stopped calling and just sent nondescript postcards on campus stationery.
Doing fine, much love to everyone at home. —Elise
. Infuriated, Charles stopped paying her tuition, but Elise’s summer job as a counselor at Camp of the Rising Son, a modest scholarship, and waitressing during the semester helped make ends meet. The only person Elise would see was Ivy. They met for milk shakes in a town halfway between Vidalia and Tupelo, and Ivy would come back from those secret meetings loaded with prayer pamphlets from Elise, which she threw straight in the trash. If Jesus was Elise’s salvation, pleasure was Ivy’s. Both were gorgeous singers, and their harmony gave you goose bumps. When she was fifteen, Ivy ditched church choir and took her heavenly soprano and flaming red hair to nearby honky-tonks, where her older biker boyfriend kept her supplied with RC Cola and rum and fended off burly admirers, often on the same nights that Elise was singing Christian pop in bell-bottoms in church basements across the country.

*  *  *

Ada always wondered what prompted Elise’s return to Vidalia, but it was no mystery to me. Paps had been buried for a full year. Elise had skipped the funeral (which Ivy had attended high as a kite). When I saw Elise, I was shocked by her change. In order to stand being back home, she’d had to seal something off deep down. She was back in Vidalia, but she might as well have been in Tibet. It killed Ada, but she was too scared to say anything: didn’t want to drive Elise away again. But Elise left anyways, married a Yankee, Chris Kriegstein, then went even farther away: Atlanta, London, then Germany, of all places. Gave Ada a hell of a time trying to figure out the calling codes and time zones.

For a while Elise and Chris were back in Atlanta, and then we were getting Christmas cards from China and Singapore. Ada told everyone in town that Chris and Elise were doing Baptist missionary work in Asia, a distinct lie: by that time Elise was a stark agnostic. She had two little girls—the younger one, Sophie, looked just like her mama: same beautiful blond curls. Having those children inside me, when they would visit during the summer, nearly made up for their mother’s departure, and I guess Ada felt the same way. Then, one year, during their annual visit, it was just Elise and Leah, her older daughter. Chris was working in Singapore, I gathered, but Sophie was absent, and Elise was walking around with a look of doom, worse than she’d had in the Paps years. That summer was the first one since she was fourteen that Elise let Ada hug her properly, but Elise’s eyes held an eerie unfocus, as though there was a word on the tip of her tongue that she was trying to remember, and if she could just recall the word everything would go back to normal.

*  *  *

The day Ada left me began warm and clear. It was May, not too hot yet, my favorite kind of weather. I had known she was leaving for weeks, months, even—the brochures, the boxes—but hadn’t quite believed it until she stepped outside of my walls for the last time. Sure, there had been times when I wanted her gone, times when her confessions had crawled up my walls like termites. I tried to summon all my old resentments in response to her gaze, so her walking out would hurt less.

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