Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
I mean,
what will happen
when Samantha isn't here
to shame us into behaving like grown-ups?
Who will keep us
from tearing each other limb from limb?
Maybe we could get a court reporter
to move in with usâ¦
She'd record every single word
Michael and I said to each otherâ
her silver hair pulled up into a neat brioche
on top of her head,
rocking ever so slightly, her eyes closed
in Ray-Charlesian concentration,
her quick fingers clicking quietly away
on the keys of her stenotype machine
while the ticker tape transcript,
that oozing ribbon of absolute truth,
gathered in white-looped paper mountains
around her primly crossed ankles.
Her presence in our home
would doubtless cut in half
the length of time Michael and I
spend arguing.
Whenever our fights escalated
to the you-know-I-can't-stand-it-
when-you-say-that stage, Michael would
protest (as usual), “I didn't say that!”
But there she'd be,
our intrepid court reporter,
to check back through her tape
and set him straight.
“Actually,” she'd say,
glancing at him coolly over the top
of her tortoise shell spectacles,
“your exact words were⦔
The couple doesn't notice me,
as I pause to watch
their embrace
in the beach parking lot.
He's younger, shirtless,
with broad cinnamon shoulders,
his slim waist circled
by jeans the color of the sea.
She's older, in a tailored white blouse,
her French twist blonded by an expert,
her slim waist circled
by jeans the color of the sand.
They're melting into each other
like figures in a sculpture by Rodinâ¦
It's seven in the morning,
so I figure this is a good-bye hug.
But now the man
takes the woman's hand and leads her
toward a plain stucco bungalow
that borders the parking lot.
He pulls her inside,
locks the rusted screen door
behind them,
then yanks down the blinds.
But it's as though I can still see themâ
see them tearing off each other's jeans.
I fling myself onto a nearby bench
and fever their story into my notebookâ¦
Maybe this is a tryst
they've been planning for weeks.
He wasn't sure she'd show up.
But here she isâ¦
Or maybe
she comes to him like this
every
morning,
before she goes to workâ¦
Maybe
he's her tennis coach,
her mailman, her masseurâ¦
Maybe he wakes up hard thinking of herâ¦
Maybe he smoothes
the sand out of his bed,
whispering her name
like a prayerâ¦
She's deathly married,
but these visits to her lover's
dank bunker by the water,
these visits are what keep her breathing.
As long as he wants her,
everything will be okay.
He can have her as long as he wants her,
for as long as he wants,
as long as he wants
to rip off her blouse,
pull down her panties,
and do it standing up in the kitchenâ¦
Because
oh God
when he looks at her like that
he brings her back
to lifeâ¦
His scent, his skin, his lipsâ¦
She needs themâ¦
nowâ¦
nowâ¦
like the thundering wave
needs the beach,
like the throbbing vein
needs bloodâ¦
Or lack
thereof.
When I look back
on my periods
I can remember
having the distinct sensation
that my belly was full
of good rich soil.
Earth, nutrients, fragrant blood,
all of it swirled within me,
all of it thirsting
for a sprinkling of fresh seed.
She wasn't quite eight years old
when she came to me one afternoon
clutching Monkey in one hand
and some tampons in the other.
She'd found them
in our medicine cabinet
and she wanted to know
what the little white tubes were for.
Ignoring the flock of butterflies
flittering in my stomach,
I swallowed hard, then spun the same
yarn my mother had spun for meâ
all about
how lucky she was to be a girl
because only
girls
can make babies!
And that as soon as she became a teenager
her body would know exactly what to do:
once a month, her belly would weave a nest,
just in case a baby cameâ
a nest that would be
a nice cozy place
for the seedling child
to grow.
But if no baby arrived,
then the nest her body had woven
would get flushed out through her vagina.
And she would need to use a tampon to catch it.
“What will the nest look like?” she asked.
“It will lookâ¦red,”
I said. “Like blood?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said. “Like blood.”
And when
she folded herself into my arms
and asked if it would hurt,
I told her that it wouldn't.
And hoped
that my answer
would turn out
to be true.
So call me curmudgeonly,
but I do
not
like it
when my morning run
is brought to a
halt
by the mud-caked paws
of Brandy's latest rescued canine
who pounces uninvited onto my shins
while Brandy giggles
and says, “Sorry. Long leash.”
Like isn't it cute how intrusive
her slobbering dog is?
There are some days
when it seems to me
that the whole world
is on too long a leash.
While waiting in line at the grocery store,
I glance at the cover
of Glamour
and see:
“Happy and Sexy at 20, 30, and 40!”
Wait just a hotter-than-thou minute!
I think to myself.
What about all us happy, sexy fifty-year-olds?
I gnash my teeth
and flip the magazine over on the rack
so that the cover's facing in.
A second later,
when it's my turn to pay,
the buff young guy working the register
does something as unexpected
as a flying pig:
he winks at me.
Did you see
that, Glamour?
He
winked
at me!
Who's happy and sexy now, huh?
Huh?
I press my money into the hunky cashier's hand,
with a seductive smile
and a flirty flutter of my lashes.
He gives me the once over,
then flashes me a sly grin and offers me something
that no man's ever offered me before:
the
senior
discount.
Is it a bad sign
if you get offered
your first senior discount
twelve years
before you're actually
old enough to receive it?
Or does it simply mean
that the jerk working the register
has shit for brains?
It's so sad
to think
that just moments
from now
you
will be gone
and I'll
be a cow.
Granted,
I've been sitting here at my computer
for well over two hours now
and I've only just begun to write this poem.
But that's not because I'm addicted to email.
That's because I had to read my newsletter
from The Overwhelmed Daughters of Mothers
with Polymyositis (which totally bummed me out).
So then I had to read the one about how
to beat the blues by shopping the CVS sale.
And I know I promised myself I'd only spend
fifteen minutes checking my email, but
someone I vaguely knew in college Googled me
and it was no small task to fill her in
on the last thirty years of my life.
Plus, how was I to know,
when Alice emailed me to ask me my opinion
of the guys who've been winking at her
on Match.com, that it would take me so long
to read all their profiles?
Then, I finally settled down to work.
And I was on a rollâthe poetry pouring from
me like lava from an active volcanoâ
when my computer made that little sound,
that little rusty-mailbox-squeaking-open sound.
And I wasn't going to open it.
Really. I wasn't.
But I guess my hand must have slipped
because suddenly my email in-box
was sitting right there on my screen.
So I figured
I might as well
take a quick peek at itâ
you know, just in case
it was something really urgent.
And it turned out to be from Roxie.
Asking me, in what I thought
was an unnecessarily snippy tone,
why I still haven't sent her
my manuscript.
Samantha was not exactly thrilled
when Michael volunteered to be a chaperone
for her choral group's May Day concert trip. But
I
was.
My mouth was practically watering
while the two of them
were packing up today
to head to Sacramento.
I could almost taste the delicious silence
I'd be dining on all weekend;
the delectable freedom I'd have
to write from morning till night.
I licked my lips at the thought
of disconnecting the Internet,
unplugging the telephone,
and totally focusing on my work.
With the house next door still
mercifully vacant, there'd even be enough quiet
for me to sit outside under our pepper tree
and write, if I chose toâ¦
But a few minutes
after Michael and Sam drove off,
Alice called to tell me that United was having
a last-minute sale on flights to Cleveland.
Which is why
I am sitting here on the red-eye,
dining on a stale Wetzel's Pretzel
and a bag of Cheetos,
on my way to surprise my mother.
I check into a Holiday Inn,
grab a taxi to the hospital,
dash to the gift shop to buy some roses,
then head upstairs to see my mother.
When I peek into her room,
I'm relieved to see that she looks
a little better than I thought she wouldâ
thinner, and sort of ragged, but okay.
Though when I walk in, she doesn't even
seem particularly surprised to see me.
Nor does she seem
particularly
happy
to see me.
She says, “Tell the nurse I need her desperately.”
“What do you need her for, Mom?”
“I need her to hold my hand.”
“I'll
hold your hand.”
I reach for her fingers, but she pulls away.
“No,” she says, “I need the
nurse
to do it.”
“But why, Mom?”
“Because she'll do it
differently.”
I'm trying not to feel hurt, and trying
to decide if I should actually call her nurse,
when my mother's physical therapist shows up
to work with her on her walking.
Even with the therapist firmly gripping her elbow,
and a nurse's aide following along
right behind her with a wheelchair,
my mother is terrified.
She keeps crying out,
shaking her fist,
insisting that the therapist
bring her back to her bed.
“If I fall down and break my hip,” she says,
“I'll die of pneumonia, and then I'll sue you!”
Which might even be funny,
if it wasn't so terrible.