Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
Then I sit down at the kitchen table,
plop Secret into my lap,
and pick up the phone to call Alice.
Maybe listening
to all the gory details
of her latest Match.com misadventures
will keep me
from having to think
about my own problemsâ¦
When I'm halfway through dialing,
I realize that I'm calling my mother's
cell phone by mistake.
But I finish punching in the number,
hoping that I'll catch her
in a rare moment of lucidity.
I'm not even really sure
what I want to talk to her about.
I guess I just want to hear her voice.
Or ask her
how
she
handled it
when
I
left for college.
Or pour out all my troubles
to the one person who knows me
better than anyone.
That isâ
when she knows me
at
all.
She says, “Holly dear, I'm so glad you called!”
She
does
know me! And she sounds so sane.
But then she says, “The sky's green here todayâ¦
Is it green there, too?”
My hope plummets like a bird pierced by an arrow.
“Uhâ¦no, Momâ¦it's just the usual blue⦔
I can hear Dr. Hack in the background.
I'd know that loathsome chuckle of his anywhere.
“Mom,” I say, “let me talk to the doctor.”
“Hey, Dr. Handsome,”
she calls over to him.
“My daughter wants to talk to you.”
“Myra darling,” I hear him coo,
“flattery will get you everywhere⦔
Then he tells her he'll take my call in the hall.
And when he says hello, I cut right to the chase:
“When are you going to wean her off the steroids?”
“Actually,” he says, “we began last week.”
“But let me guess,” I say. “The bad news
is that she's still psychotic?”
“Yes,” he says,
“but the good news
is that she's
so
psychotic
she doesn't even
know
it!”
And when he starts chuckling
at his own foul little joke,
I tell him I've got another call
coming in.
Then I hang up
and let fly a stream of curses so scary
that Secret leaps off my lap
and streaks out of the room.
And discovered,
to my horror,
that I've gained five pounds.
The day of my daughter's departure
has been bearing down on me
like a bullet train
and I've been stuffing my face
to try to quell the emptiness
growing in my gut.
I take a look at my belly in the mirrorâ
it's so vast I could almost pass
for pregnant.
The irony of this
does not
escape me.
I run my hands over my mountainous midriff
and find myself drifting back
to the day before Samantha was bornâ¦
I remember how I savored the flutter
of her Ginger-Rogersy feet
waltzing away inside of me
and thought about
where they might carry her
one day;
how I gazed down
at the opalescent orb
that barely contained her,
picturing her fully grown,
heading off to college
without so much as a backward glance,
and whispered,
“How can you leave me,
after all I'm going to do for you?”
Watching Samantha
pack up her things for college,
the mournful call of Jane's trumpet
wafting in through the window,
I find myself
feeling as though
I was there when they came
to set up the tent and the dance floor,
there when they
brought in the heat lamps,
there when they
delivered the tables and chairs,
the linens and china,
the silverware and champagne flutesâ¦
And now
I'm here,
watching them pick it all up again
and load it back onto the truck.
But, somehowâ
I blinked
and missed
the party.
Pinkie's yapping wakes me at 2 a.m.
I don't remember my dream,
but it's left me feeling panicky.
I can't fall back to sleep.
So I throw on some clothes
and hop onto my Schwinn.
Ten minutes later,
I find myself wandering though the park
where Sam and I played when she was small.
There's an ugly hodgepodge of rope bridges
where the stately metal jungle gym
once stood.
And the seesaw Samantha loved to ride
has been replaced by some kind of weird
sproinging Plexiglas contraption.
There's still a swing set,
but it's in the wrong spot.
And the wooden seats are plastic now.
The tire swing's gone.
The silver slide's gone.
The monkey bars are gone.
Even my little girl's favoriteâthe creaky old
mother-powered merry-go-roundâ
has vanished.
And so has
my little
girl.
She gave Samantha
a fierce hug good-bye and promised us
she'd take brilliant care of Secret.
Now I'm on the plane,
tucked into the middle seat
between Michael, who's sketching,
and Samantha,
who's looking out the window
at the clouds.
I cover her hand with mine
and ask her
how she's doing.
She answers my question
with an eloquent smile,
then goes back to staring out the window.
But a few seconds later
her head drops down
onto my shoulder.
My hand flutters up
like a startled bird
to cradle her cheek.
We sit here together.
Wordless. Close.
Closer than we've ever been.
Her shoulders begin to quiver.
Her warm tears slip down my fingers,
anointing my wrist.
And when my own tears come,
it's as if they're gushing
directly from a crack in my heart's dam.
I stroke her cheek,
kiss the top of her head,
wrap both arms around her.
We explore the sterile, echoing rooms
of Samantha's suite,
scouring it for aspects to admireâ
the view of the courtyard,
the size of the common room,
the picturesque slant of the walls.
Then, before we're quite ready, the other
three girls come swarming up the stairs,
their suitcases and parents in tow.
All of us greet each other, shy as deer.
But soon our daughters' breezy banter
banishes the hush.
Then, beneath the chatter, comes the tinkling
song of summer's last ice-cream truck,
floating in through the open windowâ
it's the same melody
that used to drift from the mobile
that spun above Samantha's cribâ¦
Michael hears it, too.
He reaches for my hand.
And when he laces our fingers together
the lump in my throat
threatens to cut off
my breath.
Michael whistles while he works
with a couple of the other dads,
putting together the aluminum shelving
for the bathroom.
I carefully fold Samantha's
bouquet of new winter sweaters,
tucking them, one by one,
into the drawers beneath her bed.
She doesn't need me to do this for her,
but seems to understand
that if she doesn't keep me busy
I'll crumble.
She gives my shoulder
a gentle pat,
complimenting me
on my awesome sweater-arranging skills.
And I realize
that, for the first time,
she's mothering
me.
As Sam and I
smooth the new sheets,
shimmy the pillows
into their cases,
and fluff
the clouds of comforter,
I try
not to think about
what might happen
someday
amidst the silken folds
of these virgin linens.
The constant battle
I've been waging
against a full-on
weep-a-thon
is nearly
lost
when Samantha lifts Monkey
out of her suitcase
and, unaware
that I'm watching,
clasps him
to her chest.
The girls
have begun the ballet
of getting to know each other:
“You're kidding!
I
love the Beach Boys, too!”
“Omigod! Me, too!” “Me, three!”
Squeals all around.
Michael whispers in my ear,
then slips out
to buy some roses.
Now that there's nothing left for me to do,
I feel more in the way
than an in-law on a honeymoon.
I sink
into the frayed cushions
of the weary couch,
afraid
of saying something
that might mortify my child.
Maybe the other parents
are feeling the same way,
because all of them are as quiet as dust.
We sneak awkward glances at each other,
and when our eyes meet, we smileâ
like celebrants at a wake.
Michael and I watch her
skip off down the sidewalk
with her new roommates,
the four of them already a unit,
their bursts of laughter floating back to us
as they disappear around a corner,
happier
than a litter
of leashless pups.
Then, the two of us
head out into the night,
hand in silent hand,
to find
the nearest
liquor store.
Is it a bad sign
if even when you
and your husband
choke down
every last searing drop
of a bottle of Jack Daniel's,
you still
can't quite manage
to get drunk
enough?
There's not
much time left
before Michael and I
have to head to the airport.
Just long enough
for me to snap a few picturesâ
the “before” photos,
we call them.
I bring the Nikon up to my eye
and line up the shot.
Samantha snuggles into her father,
leaning her head on his shoulder.
He circles her
with his arms,
resting his cheek
against the top of her head.
Have there ever been
two more wistful smiles,
two people so happyâ¦
and so sad?
Michael,
who never cries,
squeezes his eyes
closed.
A part of me
is almost hoping
she'll refuse to let go of me,
like she did
when she was five years old
on the first day of day campâ¦
On that sucker-punch morning in June,
Samantha locked herself onto me
like a human handcuff
and began to sob, chanting a single phrase:
“How can you leave me with these people?
How can you leave me with these people?”
She was so distraught
that her question began to make
an odd sort of sense to me.
How
could
I leave her with these people?
How could I trust these strangers
with my baby's safety�
Now, as I clasp Samantha to my chest,
it takes all my strength
not to lock myself onto
her.
How
can I leave her
with these people?