chapter seven
Rolling Fat Girl
Today, I finally went back to school after my tainted mayo calamity. Yesterday was Martin Luther King’s birthday, so I had a vacation day on top of all the sick days. There was a little part of me that thought maybe someone would say something like,
Oh, where have you been, Rosemary?
or
How are you feeling, Rosemary?
But the only person who said anything at all was Mrs. Edinburgh. I believe her exact words were,
You have a lot of work to make up, young lady.
Normally, I would’ve let the fact that I’m a miserable, unmissed loser ruin my day, but today was different. Right before lunch, I spotted Kyle Cox in the hallway. For a nanosecond our eyes met, and he smiled. At me! This time I’m
sure
he was smiling at me because there was no one else in the hallway. I checked.
All through lunch, I couldn’t stop thinking about him. I barely touched my roast beef sandwich and french fries. I didn’t even go back for ice cream or chips or seconds and thirds. I drank water instead of soda. The whole time I sat at my lunch table—all by my freakish outcast self—I was at least
thinking
normal things. Instead of lusting after chocolate, I was lusting after Kyle.
Suddenly, I got this shiny little thought: Maybe under all these bulky pounds hides the heart of a normal girl, one who doesn’t poison herself with mayo or abuse her body with food. I do have these fleeting seconds sometimes when I think I see her. Like a flash, I glimpse this girl—this other me—out of the corner of my eye. She has friends and a social life and self-confidence. I’m not sure how big or little she is, but I’m pretty sure she’s happy. I guess in some ways I am sort of like an artichoke. Maybe I’ll have to peel away the layers to get to the good part.
When the sixth-period bell rang, I was the first person out of my seat. Misty Winters and Tara Waters yelled, “Hey, Chokey! What’s the rush? Is the ice-cream truck parked out front?” I ignored them and kept going. First, I had to stop off by the bathroom to brush my hair and slap on some lip gloss. I wanted to look my 189-pound best for Kyle. I wanted to hang on to that normal-girl feeling just a little while longer. Right before the warning bell clanged, I slid into my seat. Mr. Lawrence looked up and gave me the
I-hate-fat-people
glare, but he didn’t say anything. Sometimes he’s as bad as Misty Winters.
Most of the kids around me got busy with something—picking nails or noses or scabs. Lisa Runions, who sits one table over, pulled long, scraggly strands of her bleached-blond hair around in front so she could see to peel her split ends apart. Ronnie Derryberry settled his greasy head on a stack of unopened schoolbooks (I feel sorry for whoever has to use them next year) and fell asleep.
Slowly, I turned my head in Kyle’s direction.
Sigh.
Major disappointment. There was only his empty chair. I waited. The late bell rang. Still no Kyle. With a heavy heart, I opened my biology book and resigned myself to cells,
again
. Fat cells.
At 1:32, the library door swung open. In one hand, he carried an overloaded book bag. In the other, he held a bright orange late pass. “Team meeting,” I heard him mutter to Mr. Lawrence. At the sound of Kyle’s Delightfully Enormous Strapping Boy voice, my heart thrashed around like a cat in a bag. Heat prickled my cheeks. My palms went clammy.
Love is a lot like food poisoning.
To avoid fidgeting, I sat on my hands and waited for Kyle to take his seat. From my chair to his, there was a perfect view, but instead of going to his usual third row, third table, end chair, Kyle took a sharp turn to the left and sat down in front of one of the library computers.
Damn! Damn! Damn!
Ronnie Derryberry stirred and looked up at me as if I’d actually said the words out loud. There was only one way to get a good look at Kyle—get out of my chair and walk over to the computer table where he was sitting.
Oh, God.
I’d have to pretend to Google something. Kyle need never know his nanosecond smiles had spawned Stalker Girl.
I waited and watched the clock pulse too quickly toward the end of the period. I thought about how, if you’re skinny, walking across the library probably isn’t a big deal. In fact, if you’re cute and petite like Kay-Kay Reese, it’s probably even fun—all that strutting and posing and sticking your good parts out. But, if you’re a fat girl, walking clear across the library is like crossing the interstate blindfolded.
I debated. I waited. Finally, I stood. Chairs were wedged too closely together, and the library was warm and packed with kids. Several times, I had to tap people on the shoulder and ask them to scoot in a bit. There were a few irritated sighs but no outright hostility. Finally, I reached a clearing—there was nothing standing between me and Kyle Cox except some ugly stained carpet. I wiped the sweat beads off my upper lip, smoothed out my too-tight black denim skirt (it actually fits again), pulled at my oversized sweater, and aimed my clogged feet in Kyle’s direction.
Right next to him was an empty chair. Quickly, before I lost the nerve, I plopped my barn ass into it. Big mistake. Warning! Chair on wheels! Rolling fat girl! Instead of sitting
next
to Kyle, I practically sat
on
Kyle. The computer table shook. Two seniors shot looks of pure hatred across the table. Even Mr. Lawrence glanced up from his newspaper. I sucked in my breath and held it there.
“Whoops,” Kyle said, and grinned. With an ever-so-gentle football paw, he slid my chair back to its appropriate position as if I weighed nothing at all!
“Excuse me,” I mumbled, mortified.
“No problem,” Kyle whispered. “Excuse that chair,” he said, and laughed. Then it came—another eye-meeting nanosecond smile. After that, Kyle went back to his work on the computer, which turned out to be checking sports scores on the Internet.
Even though I’ll be sixteen in two months, Mother still insists on scheduling my annual check-ups over at Dr. Cooper’s office. Most girls my age have a GYN and a prescription of birth control pills by now; I still go to the pediatrician and read
Highlights for Children
in the waiting room. To make matters worse, at the end of every visit, Dr. Cooper compares this year’s weight to last year’s weight, then he provides a bunch of bleak statistics on obesity (as if he’s telling me something I don’t already know). Finally, he’ll say, “You need to lose weight, Rosemary.”
Duh.
Mother was quiet the whole way there, but I could tell by the way she kept biting her lip and glancing at me sideways that something was up. I didn’t want to spoil my Kyle Cox good mood, so I didn’t ask her what was wrong. She squeezed into the parking lot and snatched a space next to a behemoth SUV. “Rosie?” she said, shutting off the engine.
“Yeah?” Mother dabbed on some lipstick and checked her reflection in the rearview mirror. “What is it?” I asked.
“Oh, never mind. It was nothing,” she said, and hopped out of the car before I could press the matter.
Inside the doctor’s office, Mother darted toward the waiting room, and I stopped at the glass partition to give my insurance card to the receptionist. “I’m Rosemary Goode. I have an appointment with Dr. Cooper,” I said.
“Dr. Cooper’s snow skiing, hon. You’re seeing Mrs. Wallace today.”
As if on cue, a tall, broad-shouldered woman bustled into the waiting room. “You must be Rosemary,” she said, and smiled at me. I glanced over at Mother, but she had her head stuck in a
Field & Stream
magazine.
“Do you have any idea why you’re here, Rosemary?” Mrs. Wallace asked when we were tucked in her office instead of one of the cold, stark examining rooms.
“I
thought
I was here for my usual check-up,” I replied.
“I know. I’m sorry about that. I asked your mother to please tell you before y’all came in, but I had a feeling she might not.”
“Tell me what?” I asked.
“Well, last week, I ran an ad in the
Daily Herald
. I was looking for candidates to participate in a study I’m conducting for my Ph.D. at Vanderbilt. I’m researching the effects of short-term counseling on weight loss. Your mother was very enthusiastic about signing you up, but she thought you might be reluctant if she pushed the idea on you.”
“So she
tricked
me into coming here?”
Mrs. Wallace looked at me apologetically. “I know that must make you angry. It would make me angry, too, but would it be all right if I just told you a little bit about the study and then you could make up your own mind?” I let out an irritated sigh, and she took this as a yes.
“There’s been some research that suggests that even a few sessions of counseling can help a person shed extra pounds. You see, food is just a coping mechanism, and like all coping mechanisms, it’s used to medicate a problem. A person might feel sad about something, so he or she eats to numb that feeling. Or a person feels empty inside, so he or she eats to fill that void.” Mrs. Wallace settled back in her chair and folded her
un
manicured hands across her lap. I could tell she was waiting for me to say something.
“So you’re at Vanderbilt?” I asked. Since fourth grade I’d had my sights set on going to what Aunt Mary referred to as a smarty-pants college, and Vandy was my number one choice, even though I’d probably have to sell a kidney to afford it. Mrs. Wallace brightened slightly at my question in spite of the fact that it had nothing to do with coping mechanisms.
“Yep, I’m a Commodore fan all the way. What about you?” she asked.
“I’m not really into sports,” I replied. A long uncomfortable silence passed between us. I was trying to make up my mind about whether or not I wanted to be somebody’s guinea pig (no pun intended), and it seemed like Mrs. Wallace was trying to help me along by keeping quiet. “So what would we do at these sessions?” I asked finally.
“Mostly we’d just talk. I’d probably ask you to keep a journal. There might be an article I’d want you to read now and then. We’d meet on Monday afternoons for half an hour.”
“How involved would my mother be with all this?”
“No more involved than she is right this minute,” said Mrs. Wallace. “Listen, you go home and think about it. I’ll put you on next Monday’s schedule, but if you don’t show up, no harm done.” She stood and opened the door for me. No pressure. No lecture. I liked this.
On the way home, I didn’t yell at Mother. She looked tired and defeated somehow, and I knew she’d tricked me into seeing Mrs. Wallace because she was worried. Frankly, that made two of us.
chapter eight
The C Word
I’m supposed to be folding clean towels and pricing a new line of shampoo, but it’s so quiet in the salon this afternoon, I can’t stand being here. Normally, this is the busiest time of day—blow dryers roaring, women cackling, the phone ringing off the hook. Today, however, everyone (except Mother) is over at Piggly Wiggly’s buying toilet paper. The weather forecast said there’d be a “wintry mix” tonight.
After her last appointment canceled, Mother looked at me and said, “I’ve got to go. Close up the shop. Miss Bertha’ll drive you.” Her face was pale and sweaty. For a second, I thought she might faint.
“What’s wrong?” I asked. “Let me come with you. Miss Bertha can close up.”
“Oh, Rosie, I’m
fine
,” said Mother, putting on her happy face. “Everything’s
fine
,” she said again on her way out the door. Later, when Miss Bertha called to check on her, Mother was
lying on the
sofa
. Mother lying on the sofa is about as normal as my going for a jog.
When Miss Bertha dropped me off at home, Mother really did appear to be fine. “I just had a case of low blood sugar,” she said, smiling. I swear my mother could lose a limb in a fiery crash and she’d look up at the paramedics and cheerfully say,
Don’t y’all worry about me. I am just fine.
The following morning I heard Mother on the phone—at five-thirty—and I knew there was some sort of crisis. I lay in my warm bed trying to translate the muffled sounds from the first floor into distinguishable words.
Had the pipes at Heavenly Hair frozen again? Was the burglar alarm going off?
I glanced out the window. No “wintry mix” after all.
All at once, I sat up.
It’s Mrs. McCutchin,
I told myself.
She’s dead.
Quietly, I slipped down the creaky stairs. I sat on the bottom step and pressed my ear against the door. The kitchen was just on the other side, and I could tell Mother was making her morning tea. I could also tell by the way she was talking that Aunt Mary was on the other end of the phone line.
“He just said I needed a lung X-ray,” said Mother. “And he wants to run tests.” The teakettle started to whistle. Mother rattled cups and saucers. “Hold on a minute,” she said.
A lung X-ray? Why? What sort of tests?
I wanted to burst through the door and ask my questions all out in a rush, but I didn’t. Instead, I crept up the stairs and climbed back into my still-warm bed. Mother wouldn’t tell me what was really going on anyway. She’d talk to Aunt Mary for sure, but not to me. When I ask Mother
why
she won’t tell me things, her standard answer is “Rosie, I’m the parent. You’re the child. It’s my job to do the worrying. ” I know this protective attitude is supposed to make me feel all safe and warm, but it doesn’t. It just makes me feel left out.
According to Grandma Georgia, Mother and Aunt Mary weren’t always so close. Grandma Georgia says once upon a time they were like two dogs trying to piss on the same tree. They fought over everything back in high school—clothes, shoes, boys, friends. After Mother got pregnant with me (at age seventeen! ), Aunt Mary thought she’d finally have Spring Hill High School all to herself—Bluebirds, cheerleading, drama club—but it didn’t turn out that way.
Mother became the topic of choice on the high school rumor mill:
I heard she’s getting her GED. I heard she’s putting that baby up for adoption.
At first, Aunt Mary tried to squelch the rumors with the truth:
Yes, she’s coming back to school. Yes, she’s keeping the baby.
But the talk persisted and the rumors raged. Soon, my aunt avoided the gossip altogether—she skipped Bluebird meetings, missed cheerleading practices. She didn’t even audition for the spring musical.
The way Grandma Georgia remembers it, Mother was furious when she learned her sister was hiding out in shame. “Just act like everything’s fine and ignore them!” Mother ordered. So typical. Grandma Georgia says Mother never missed a beat when she found out she was pregnant. Apparently, she reorganized her dreams the way some people clean out closets—threw out the old ones and hung new ones in their place.
The following afternoon things were humming right along at the salon. Miss Bertha was politely trying to discourage Hannah Pierce, a friend of hers from the Methodist church, from getting hair extensions, and Richard was totally livid. He had his heart set on the 15 percent tip (hair extensions are $400). Apparently, when Mrs. Pierce called to make the appointment, Richard had answered the phone. She does have a very young voice; Richard had no idea that the woman was a retired granny living on Social Security.
Mother mysteriously disappeared, although it wasn’t really a mystery. I knew she’d probably gone to have the chest X-ray. To distract myself, I played around with Richard’s old hairdresser dummy. I renamed her Misty and gave her a fabulous mullet.
Around five, Richard left in a huff. “Good-bye,
Rosie
,” he said too sweetly and let the door clatter noisily behind him.
“Good-bye to you, too,” Miss Bertha mumbled under her breath. “The very idea that he was going to give that poor lady extensions. I mean, really! Can you imagine if old Hannah showed up at church on Sunday morning with hair trailing down her back? I did have a hell of a time talking her out of them, though. I hope she’s not starting to lose it a little. She barely scrapes by on Social Security and a flimsy pension. How on earth could she justify hair extensions? Unless Richard didn’t tell her how much they cost. That’d be just like him, don’t you think, Rosie? Not to tell her, I mean.”
The sufficiently mulleted hairdresser dummy was propped up at Richard’s station, and I was poking her vacant polystyrene foam eyes with bobby pins.
“You’re mighty quiet this afternoon, hon. Cat got your tongue?”
“Mother went for a chest X-ray,” I said. Miss Bertha stopped closing out the register and looked at me. “I know you probably already know about it. I overheard her on the phone with Aunt Mary yesterday morning.”
“So what do
you
think it is?” Miss Bertha asked. I could tell she was relieved in a way to be talking about it. I shrugged and sighed and jammed the bobby pin in harder.
“Hon, Richard still uses that dummy once in a while.”
“I don’t know what it is, but it’s not like Mother to go home from work early and lie down. Whatever it is, I’m sure she’ll never tell me about it. She could be dying and I’d be the last to know.”
“Rosie! Hush your mouth!” Miss Bertha scolded.
“It’s just a figure of speech. I mean, she’s not
dying
. Is she?” I asked, wondering if Miss Bertha knew things I didn’t.
“Oh, of course not! It’s just bronchitis, is my guess. Pneumonia at the worst.”
“That’s what I was thinking,” I replied.
That night at home Mother seemed strange. She was pale again and coughing. She barely touched her dinner, and she was quiet. No
Have you used your treadmill, Rosie?
or
When will you clean up that messy room?
I hung out with her awhile, but I could tell she wanted to be alone. Finally, I went upstairs. I knew better than to ask about the X-ray I wasn’t even supposed to know existed.
Just before nine, the phone rang. Mother picked up downstairs. I picked up upstairs (as if anyone would be calling for me). “Hang up,” Mother snapped. Just as I was about to, I heard a man’s voice on the other end of the line.
Dr. What’s-His-Name? What doctor calls patients at nine o’clock on a Friday night? Shouldn’t he be finishing up dinner at the country club by now? It was bad news.
“Rosie, I said
hang up
,” Mother insisted. Obediently, I pressed the button on my phone.
I fumed. I paced. If I had more nerve, I’d eavesdrop or pound down the steps and demand the truth. Instead, my imagination turned to food—an off-limits bag of nachos and a jar of salsa, snacks for Mother’s downtown merchants’ meeting.
It would be so nice to have my own refrigerator, to buy my own groceries. I could eat anything I wanted then, without scrutiny and judgment. Without warning. Without stopping.
I will not eat
.
I will not think about eating
.
A person eats to numb sad feelings or fill a void,
I heard Mrs. Wallace say.
I fell on my soft bed and closed my eyes. The sound of distant tires on asphalt whispered through the pale blue walls. The next-door neighbor called the dog in from his nightly pee. I slipped between the cool, clean sheets and thought about Kyle, which was sort of like fantasizing about a hot fudge sundae. I knew I couldn’t have either one. Finally, I gave up and went to take a bath.
I filled my claw-foot tub with water and lavender-scented bubbles. Mother remodeled my bathroom several years ago. She replaced the cracked tiles, painted the walls a lovely shade of lavender, made toile curtains. We got the old tub at a junk stand on the side of the road. I thought Mother was crazy when she brought it home, but one of her clients reglazed it for free, and now it’s good as new. It’s the kind of glamorous tub that
should
make a girl feel pretty when she’s in it.
Just as I was about to climb in, I heard a voice. I turned to look, although I already knew what it was. It belonged to the sneaky full-length mirror hanging on the back of the bathroom door. “You’re an idiot, Rosemary Goode,” it said.
“You should be more tactful,” I whispered, poised to hang a towel over the ill-mannered thing, but I stopped myself. I stared at my glob-like reflection—bumps and lumps and dimples everywhere. Not even a nanosecond smiler who appears to be without the sadistic Y chromosome that afflicts so many other high school boys could stomach that, a bulging, hulking, out-of-shape body. The mirror might be caustic, but it’s correct just the same.
After my bath, I headed downstairs. I was ready to devour the leftovers in the fridge, snarf up the Ben & Jerry’s Chunky Monkey, feast on Mother’s chips and salsa. I was just about to start. I had my nose shoved in the carton, and I was inhaling the ice cream like one of those addicts who sniffs aerosol cans. I took a deep breath. I closed my eyes.
I thought of Kyle again and his lovely smile. I thought of Kay-Kay.
Quietly, I scraped everything into the garbage, neatly tied up the bag, and tossed it into the outside trash can. Mother would be pissed, of course, but not as pissed as if I’d eaten everything. It was my own private victory, right in my very own kitchen, the least likely place for me to experience victory of any sort.
Mother had been holed up in her bedroom since dinner. Through the walls, I could hear the monotonous droning of some woman on HGTV. This was not at all like Mother. Mother’s a go-to-bed-early, get-up-early kind of person. On Friday nights, she’s asleep before ten because on Saturday mornings—her busiest day—she’s at the salon by six o’clock.
For the first few years after I was born, Mother chugged along like the Little Engine That Could (Grandma Georgia’s description, not mine). She worked for Mrs. Avery, the previous owner of Heavenly Hair, saved every dime she made, built up a loyal clientele, and when it came time for Mrs. Avery to retire, Mother bought the shop. Right from the start, she was ambitious; her goal was to fix every head of hair in Maury County, male or female. She advertised. She did mass mailings. She put ads on the local radio and cable stations. She participated in every community event and even sponsored a softball team. Within two years of buying Heavenly Hair, Mother had doubled its profits. Mother would never stay up this late on a Friday night.
I tiptoed to her door and debated whether or not I should knock. “Come in,” said Mother. “I know you’re standing out there.”
Mother was in bed and still wearing her work clothes. “Sit down,” she said, patting the bed. The mattress sagged beneath my weight. The HGTV topic was slugs. Garden Lady scooped up a fat slimy creature and held it closer to the camera. Mother muted her.
“I went to the doctor this afternoon,” she said without my even asking. I held my breath and cursed myself for dumping Ben & Jerry. There’d be no lovers to comfort me later. I tried not to look at the dark half-moons under Mother’s eyes.
How long have they been there? A month? Six months?
Mother drew in a ragged breath and let it out again. “Normally, I wouldn’t burden you with something like this, but . . . well, Spring Hill is a small town. People are bound to notice certain things,” she said.
“Notice what things? What’s wrong?” My heart pumped furiously.
Bronchitis,
I prayed.
Pneumonia, please!
I could feel blood pulsing toward my face.
“I had some tests this afternoon. I don’t have a bad cold. It’s something called Hodgkin’s disease,” said Mother flatly. She took my hand and squeezed it hard. Two syllables formed the dreaded word. “It’s can-cer,” Mother whispered. I tried to breathe, but my throat closed up tight. “Don’t worry, Rosie.” said Mother quickly. “Everything’s going to be just fine. Even the doctor says so.” Mother kept on talking—
the lymph something or other . . . white blood cells . . . trial versus standard treatments . . . the most curable kind
.
I struggled to listen, to make myself believe the positive spin Mother put on the C word. When she’d finished talking, I mustered a smile and a
You’ll be okay,
but I knew she wasn’t okay. A part of me wanted to confront her with the cancer truth—chemo and radiation and suffering—so we could both deal with it honestly, but mostly I wanted to comfort her, to be the first person she needed instead of Aunt Mary. For a long while, we just sat there in the quiet darkness, still holding hands. Mine was sweaty and warm, hers clammy and cold. I could almost feel the fear pulsing back and forth between us.