--ANYTHING I’VE TRIED TO KEEP BY FORCE I’VE
LOST
The Spaces in Between
She is nine, nine going on something
else. Already she has learned to be
brave and observant, as well as the correct way to unearth and bury.
She’d never liked playthings, but
still she bounces a Barbie on the sofa armrest, humming, acting as if she’s
studying the doll’s palms when really she’s looking through the space in
between Barbie’s perfect fingers where her mother is splayed.
The girl knows a little about
narcotics and too much wine consumption, but these are not issues for her
mother. This is something far more
slippery and bleak.
The girl wishes she were older and
wise. Adults have answers. For instance, her aunt knows things, but
she’s a shrug of the shoulders, a secret keeper or just plain greedy.
“Why don’t you sing a little
softer,” her mother says, even though the girl is just humming without using
words to her made-up song. “And could
you close the blinds?”
She does as told, looks the sun in
the eye first. Men have walked on the
moon. The sun’s surface is too hot for
those kinds of shenanigans, and still it is her favorite thing that lives in
the sky.
“Momma, can I tell you a story?”
“Only if you speak in your quiet
voice and don’t get all jumpy at the exciting parts.”
Her mother winces, reaching to the
carpet, so the girl gets it for her, picking up the damp dishrag and laying it
across the woman’s forehead.
The girl whispers, “In a grand
castle somewhere near Ireland, there once lived a damsel...”
Everything is reversed. The girl knows how it’s really supposed to
work. Moms get their kids up, make them
breakfast, hustle them off to the school bus.
Moms are strict but like lots of sunlight. They’re the ones that tell bedtime stories.
The girl doesn’t mind. She has an imagination that needs flexing,
freedom to roam. As she narrates to her
mother, the girl pictures herself as a cement truck spewing golden tar, making
a clean new road that the two of them will walk on soon, arm in arm, escaping
to a fun land, like the yellow brick road leading to Oz.
Her mother drifts to sleep.
The girl’s dad is upstairs in his
home office. He is not a mean man, not
at all. He is quiet like snow and just
as white. It is hard for him to smile
and sometimes she hears him sniffling when she eavesdrops. She used to be angry that he wasn’t
stronger. Men are supposed to be able to
lift heavy weights and fix broken things.
She’s not even half way through her
story, or to the good part, when Aunt Sandy comes over. The girl knows it’s her because she taps on
the door like a sock puppet might, soft little nudging sounds, before just
going ahead and letting herself in. She
breaks into a smile when she sees the girl, then the smile goes jagged finding
the girl’s mother on the sofa. Aunt
Sandy puts her praying hands to the side of her face, closes her eyes and makes
a sleeping motion. The girl checks her
mother, and nods to her aunt.
They go into the kitchen, Aunt Sandy
tiptoeing so her heels don’t click.
Aunt Sandy hugs the girl, whispers
her nickname, “Izzy, Izzy, Izzy.” She’d
prefer her aunt use Elizabeth. Izzy is
reserved for the girl’s mother and a fleet of make-believe friends that she trusts.
Aunt and Izzy sit at the round table
with the silver siding and bruised-blue Formica top. They have dark pink fruit punch in clear
glasses and Izzy imagines a cartoon fish zipping inside, burping at her and
chuckling.
Aunt Sandy has a long goat face with
chin whiskers. She looks sad today. The girl asks what’s wrong, but before she
does, Izzy decides that if Aunt Sandy tells the truth, then it will mean she
really can trust the woman.
Aunt Sandy shakes her head, the eyes
flicking for an answer, and the girl looks at her lap knowing it doesn’t matter
now what answer’s given because it’ll just be a lie, no different than the ones
her father and the doctors tell.
Izzy’s heard the word a thousand
times. With each utterance, though, one
of the adults will introduce the term as if it’s thin crystal or a hot cake out
of the oven.
“Depression isn’t forever,
Izzy. Besides, there are new medicines,”
Aunt Sandy says. “Your mom’s going to
get better.”
Then Auntie asks would Izzy like to
come live with her for a while, hmm? She
reaches across for the girl’s palms.
Izzy lets her have them and thinks, “Cold hands, warm heart,” but if
that’s so, then the reverse must be true, and she snatches her hands back.
“Hey!” Aunt Sandy says.
Izzy stands. She flings the pitcher, watches the faded
fuchsia fluid loop and curl before splashing her aunt.
She runs to the sofa. “Momma, Momma,” Izzy says, shaking her
mother, but whispering even so, “wake up.
We have to go.”
Aunt Sandy calls, “Peter! Peter!”
Peter, Izzy’s father, bounds out of
his room, his footfalls loud on the ceiling.
And then he’s stomping down the stairs and Aunt Sandy is pointing at
Izzy even though she’s right there, just a few feet away, and Auntie is
screaming through her anger at being soaked.
“…blouse cost two hundred dollars!”
Her father can’t quiet Aunt Sandy
and soon they’re both yelling and so is Izzy’s mother, awake now and propped up
on her elbows, and then Izzy’s mother shakes Izzy’s grip off and shouts for
everyone to stop, to shut up, the noise is too loud, it will kill her if the
noise doesn’t stop, it will, it will.
And so they all go quiet. Izzy checks to be sure her mother is serious,
but the dishrag is pulled over her mother’s eyes.
Izzy stands, biting her lip on the
inside so they can’t see. She floats
over to her aunt and says she’s sorry; she has allowance and will pay for the
ruined blouse. She doesn’t look at her
father. She sticks out her hand and
tells her aunt, Sure, sure she would very much like to spend some time living
at her house. When can they go?
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