Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
Heaving the cutting board
into the bin,
suddenly thinking
how like it I amâ
useless and warped,
shredded and old,
scarred from too many
dull thwops of the blade,
scuffed and stained,
coming ungluedâ
thinking of all
the mistakes I've made.
My daughter
will no longer
be living under
my roof.
The thin neck of life's hourglass
used to seem so mercifully clogged.
But now the sand races through it
like a rabbit late for a date.
No time left to impart motherly wisdom.
No time left to tell her all those deep things,
those profound things that I
should
have been
telling her all these years.
The weight of my failure
nearly flattens all four of my tires
as I drive around town doing errands
while listening to
Little Women
on CD.
Now
those
girls had a
mother.
My own impoverished daughter
had to snatch at the random bits
I tossed her way:
“If you pick your zits they'll leave scars.”
“Never wash reds with whites.”
“Don't pat strange dogs
till you let them sniff your fingers.”
What was I thinking,
frittering away all those years?
Nowâ
there's no time left.
How can Samantha
be getting ready to leave home already,
when she's only just arrived?
How can seventeen years have passed
since Michael and I carried our nestling
across the threshold?
The memory of that day,
the trembling splendor of it,
seems never to fadeâ¦
We tucked Samantha into the basket
we'd feathered with fleece, then hovered
like a pair of wonder-struck doves,
spellbound by each smile, each grimace,
each frown that flickered like candlelight
across her luminous face.
Bewitched by every blink of her eyes,
beguiled by every yawn,
charmed by each luxurious stretch,
we laced our fingers together,
marveling at our little bird's
tiny chestâ
the way it kept
rising and falling,
rising and falling,
each
breath
a masterpiece.
Fabulous
from the moment
she was conceived!
And such a thoughtful little embryoâ¦
While all the other mothers-to-be leaned over
the rolling ship's rails of their pregnancies
retching up their saltines,
Sam took me sailing on a glassy sea.
She polished me
from the inside out
till people said I glowed
like a crystal ball;
cast some kind of
spell over my scalp
so, for the first time in my life,
I actually had a mane.
She inhabited my body
like a perfect roommateâ
happy to have
whatever I served up for dinner,
content to let me
hold the remote
when we sat together
surfing the channels.
I felt her surging within me,
felt her head nudging
the taut bowstrings of my rotunda,
and felt so grateful that she'd chosen
me.
In fact,
you might even say
he was a little
obsessedâ¦
After my first trimester,
he bought a video camera
so that he could record the weekly progress
of my mushrooming midsection.
I'd stand sideways,
pulling my nightgown
tight across my stomach,
while he filmed my burgeoning bump.
When I was further along,
I'd lay back on the bed
with my belly exposed
so that he could videotape the baby kicking.
He marveled
at each undulation
as it quivered across the surface
of the Jell-O mold that I had become.
He interviewed me on camera,
asking how I felt about
my imminent motherhood.
“Thrilledâ¦excitedâ¦terrified,” I told him.
And when
I turned the camera on Michael
and asked how he felt
about becoming a father,
he reached forward
to pat the bun in my off-screen oven,
and said, “I just hope the baby's healthy.
And that she appreciates fine art.”
One day
your daughter's
cooing, gurgling, wordless.
The next, you're asking her how old she is
and she's holding up two pudgy fingers,
crying out, “Awmos twoooo!”
Not long after that,
she's blowing your mind
with her ability to count to ten.
And soon she can count
all the way up to a hundred.
And then to a thousand.
Then one day,
when you sit down to help her
with her math homework
you realize that you have no idea
what
equals.
You must have forgotten.
Or maybe
you
never
knew.
But your daughter does.
“That's easy,” she says. “It's
x.
”
“Of course it is!” you bluff.
“Of course⦔
Anything to avoid writing.
I clear away
the forest of forgotten T-shirts
sighing on the floor.
I wrestle
with the maddening mess
of fallen hangers.
I toss out
the moldy pairs
of lonely outgrown sneakers.
Then,
way in the back,
I find a box.
Here's Samantha's mobileâ
the one that hung above her crib
when she was a baby.
I run my fingers over it,
then wind it up and listen to its melody
one more timeâ¦
Sam used to love this mobile.
She'd lie on her back gazing up at it,
mesmerized by its spinning pastel birds,
listening so intently to its song,
her plump lips parted as if she wanted
to drink in its sugared notes,
her hands
clasping Monkey
to her chest,
her legs moving
through a memory of water
as though she was still womb-swimmingâ¦
Then,
I shove it back into
the dusty depths of the closet,
wipe the tears from my eyes,
and hoist up
the overflowing wastebasket
to carry it outside
and empty it into the trash bin.
But on my way there
I hear Pinkie yapping.
I glance into the neighbor's yard
and see Madison playing hide-and-seek.
She's scrunched down on her haunches,
hiding from her mother
behind the thin stem
of their mailbox,
her face tucked into the crook
of her chubby little elbow,
apparently convinced
that this makes her invisible.
Jane taps her foot,
checks her watch, shades her eyes.
She sees her daughter (obviously)
but feels obliged to pretend she doesn't.
In a voice tighter than the jeans she's wearing,
she calls her daughter's nameâ
“Madisonâ¦Madisonâ¦
Where are you Madison?”
Jane stares at the sky, heaves a leaden sigh,
as if she longs for the company of adults;
for life as it was before the invasion
of this tangle-haired energy-zapperâ¦
Poor woman.
She doesn't know
that someday she'll long
for this late August afternoon
when she could have held
each instant
like a jewel
in the palm of her still smooth hand.
Yesterday, Roxie called to tell me
that if I don't finish my book by October,
I'll lose my spot on next fall's list.
So, today, I was planning
on spending the whole day
writing dozens of brilliant poems.
I was going to pop in some ear plugs,
put on my Bose headset,
and make some real progressâ
in spite of Madison's screaming,
Pinkie's yapping, Jane's trumpeting,
and Duncan's thundering drums.
But then Samantha
invited me to help her bake
some butterscotch brownies.
She said she wanted
to fill the freezer with them
before she leaves for college.
“That way,” she explained, “When I'm away
at school, you can defrost a batch every week
and mail them to Grandma for me.”
I was planning
on spending the whole day
writing dozens of brilliant poems.
But I spent the day
with my daughter, instead,
baking dozens of brilliant brownies.
The kitchen's
a sugary,
floury,
butterscotchy mess.
But just as we begin to scour it,
Wendy, Tess, and Laura arrive
to whisk Sam away
for one last girls' night out.
“Can you give me a few minutes?” she says.
“I've got to help my mom clean up.”
“We'll help, too!” Tess says.
“We will?” Wendy says.
Laura gives Wendy
a swift kick in the shin.
“We
will!”
Wendy says,
and everyone cracks up.
Then, the four of them set to work
like whirling kitchen dervishes,
refusing to let me
lift a finger.
I clutch Secret to my chest,
as I listen to their familiar chatter
filling up my kitchen like sunlight
one last timeâ¦
And when the room is spotless,
the girls wolf down some brownies,
hug me good-bye, and zip out of the house,
leaving in their wake
a terrible silence.
Then I turn and lean against it,
stroking Secret's fuzzy head.
I glance out the window
at our pepper tree
and see a handful of ashen leaves
plummet to their deaths.
I look past our roses
and see Madison riding her tricycle.
My nose
begins to stingâ
the way it always does
right before I start to cry.
But I force back
the flood,
afraid that if I let
a single tear fall
it will unleash
a storm
bigger
than Katrina.
My suddenly six-year-old daughter
hopped onto her brand-new popsicle-pink bicycle
with an I-can-
do
-this-thing gleam in her eyes
and began peddling across the empty school yard.
I trotted along next to her
like an out-of-breath sidecar,
one hand gripping
the back of her seat,
the other hand
holding fast to the handlebar,
making sure she didn't tip too far
in either direction.
“That's itâ¦
You're doing greatâ¦Keep it upâ¦
Don't worryâ¦I've got youâ¦
I've got you⦔
Her fingers
white-knuckling the handle grips,
her jaw set,
she wobbled, wavered, swerved, swayed
and then, without warning,
broke free of my grasp and shoved off,
picking up speed faster
than a jet roaring down a runway.
I stood there, stunned, watching my daughter
blaze away from me like a meteor,
her white helmet glinting in the sun,
her back tense and proud.
And a moment later, when she cast
a quick glance back over her shoulder at me,
I saw that her grin was even wider
than the gulf that was opening up
between usâ¦