Read Blue Plate Special Online
Authors: Michelle D. Kwasney
“Oh, Madeline”—she sounds genuinely sad—“I—I’m sorry you
had to go through that. Life is so unfair sometimes.” She surprises me with a sudden hug.
Aside from Tad holding me in his arms after sex, it’s the first hug anyone’s ever given me.
When Muralee lets go, I blink back tears and hand her my clothes.
ned—the same man
who booked our room—
schedules an interview
with jeremy and me.
the diner closes at eleven
,
he says
. charlotte and
me’ll talk to you then.
we show up at 10:30
pick a booth in the corner,
share a banana split,
passing time.
at eleven ten
the last customer files out.
ned hits the outside lights,
flips the
open
sign to
closed
,
drops a coin in the jukebox,
sits down across from us.
his black beard is laced with silver
and his fingernails are chewed to the quick.
as an old elvis presley song plays
a lady slides in beside him,
her red hair gray at the roots.
she lights a cigarette, inhales.
so you two kids want a job?
she asks,
her words
encased in smoke.
jeremy and i nod.
yes
,
ma’am
, i add,
folding my hands
on my belly bulge.
hoarsely, she laughs.
you don’t have to call me
ma’am
—
i’m charlotte.
when are you due?
my heart speeds up.
larry got me pregnant in early june,
but i didn’t have sex with jeremy
till the start of july.
i do the math. shrug.
february or march
,
i guess.
another husky laugh.
hell
,
i didn’t start
losing track till my third kid.
how long the two of you been married?
um
,
well…
i start.
pfff!
she smiles.
relax
,
honey.
ned and me got four kids together
and we ain’t never tied the knot.
she rolls her eyes.
he calls me his significant other.
ned’s fingers drum the table.
the openings are for a waitress
and a dishwasher.
you two got experience?
washing dishes
,
we blurt out together.
how about waitressing?
charlotte asks.
i’m a fast learner
, i tell her.
she motions toward my belly.
you better be!
there’s a long moment of silence.
elvis croons
only you.
even though it’s not my
kind of music,
it’s getting under my skin.
the lady draws on her cigarette again.
when could the two of you start?
i mean, if we hire you.
knocking knees with jeremy,
i answer,
right away.
ned nods,
finds a hangnail to nibble.
the jobs are under the table.
either of you have
a problem with that?
not knowing what
he means
i tip sideways,
glancing beneath our booth.
charlotte elbows ned’s side.
girl’s got a sense of humor
,
ned
,
i like that.
whaddaya say we
put these kids to work?
* * *
my first day on the job
i cut my finger slicing lemons and
toss a kid’s retainer case in the trash.
for my encore,
i drop a plate.
breath held, i wait
to see if anyone jumps,
screams,
has a coronary.
no one does.
broom in hand,
charlotte appears,
sliding the shiny white shards
into a dingy, gray dustpan,
saying,
relax
,
honey
,
it’s only a plate.
* * *
waitressing is harder than it looks,
especially remembering
who ordered what.
the last thing i want is for
a table full of people to
play musical plates after
i’ve dropped off their food.
that’s a sure way to nix a tip,
and jeremy and i need the money.
after several days, i get an idea.
i make notes on each slip before
clipping them on the line for ned.
hey
,
desiree
, he calls from the grill,
what the heck’s a sem cap turk club?
rushing past, i answer,
the guy in the seminoles hat
ordered a turkey club sandwich.
when he shakes his head,
charlotte says,
the girl’s got a system
,
ned
,
deal with it!
* * *
charlotte gives me plenty of advice—
what foods to eat for my baby,
what kind of vitamins to buy,
which types of shoes to wear,
so i won’t get varicose veins.
she even drives me into town
to sign up for medicaid
so i can see a baby doctor.
some folks might call
her overbearing,
but i don’t mind.
i like having someone care.
* * *
every night now
i get up several times to pee—
probably on account of the baby,
since i used to sleep straight through.
i try to move slowly, carefully,
so the mattress won’t squeak
and bother jeremy.
except sometimes
i wish he would stir.
like if i forget where i am
and expect to hear mam snoring.
or when i wake from a school dream—
wandering the halls alone,
searching for carol ann,
about to miss a test
i didn’t study for.
fragmented moments,
evidence of the life
i left behind.
sometimes,
i’m disappointed
i was only dreaming.
* * *
ned cuts us a deal on
a bigger, better room,
complete with a kitchenette,
and charlotte gives me
her old maternity clothes.
at the diner,
i pick up her slang—
bossy in a bowl
for beef stew,
shivering liz
for jell-o,
sweep the kitchen
for hash.
after two weeks,
she puts me in charge
of deciding the daily
blue plate special.
so i do what i’ve seen
her do many times—
stand before the open fridge,
hip cocked, inhaling refrigerated air,
waiting for the leftovers to speak to me.
hey, charlotte,
i call,
we’ve got three big tubs
of mashed murphy and
hockey pucks climbing the walls.
how’s shepherd’s pie sound to you?
charlotte breezes past,
hauling a bag of trash
to the dumpster.
you’re a natural!
* * *
one humid wednesday,
our day off,
jeremy and i
take a bus to cedar key
then walk to the nearest beach.
the bluest water i’ve ever seen
reflects a cloudless sky.
seagulls caw overhead.
excited, i turn to jeremy.
i love the smell here. don’t you?
he wrinkles his nose.
smells like dead fish to me.
i swat his arm,
kick off my flip-flops,
hurry across the hot sand.
as warm, wet fingers
tickle my feet
a bumpy white shell
with pink insides
bumps up against my big toe.
when i reach to pick it up,
my baby kicks up a storm.
sometimes it freaks me out
knowing there’s
this living,
breathing thing inside me,
growing bigger every day.
overwhelmed, i start to cry.
jeremy pulls me close,
our stomachs touch,
then he feels the baby kick too.
surprised, he jumps back.
whoa!
that dude’s got some strong-ass legs.
laughing now,
i wipe tears away.
it’s not a dude,
it’s a dudette.
that so?
i nod.
definitely.
jeremy rests both hands on my belly.
did i ever tell you my dad played
soccer at buffalo state?
i roll my eyes.
only a zillion times.
well
—jeremy smiles—
maybe our little dudette
is gonna take after her grandpa.
hours later,
when the sun’s gone down,
my pretty shell sits on the dresser
and jeremy snores beside me.
i lay awake,
taunted by the memory of his smile.
how will i ever tell him the truth?
in the middle of the night
my everyday fears become monsters
that threaten to swallow me whole.
* * *
a week before christmas
jeremy and i take a bus
to the kmart in ocala.
we buy a tiny fake tree,
pine-scented candles,
and a can of artificial snow.
on christmas eve,
the diner closes early
and jeremy and i
order takeout
to eat in our room.
holiday music plays on our radio,
candlelight flickers on the walls,
fake snow lines the sill.
i slide jeremy’s present
out from under our bed.
he peels back the paper,
beams.
wow, a vcr!
now i can tape
the simpsons.
my gift’s in a tiny box.
inside is a ring with
a thin, shiny band
and a tag that says
genuine gold plated.
jeremy slips it on my finger.
since we’re gonna have a baby together,
i’d say it’s time we got engaged.
i push the truth aside,
bury my face in jeremy’s neck,
and hug him as hard as i can.
* * *
by the time
the new year rolls around
i have the regulars pegged.
stew, the one-eyed meter reader
who always orders steak and eggs.
joe hobbs, who manages the feed store,
a grits-and-pancakes man.
sally haas, the town librarian,
who drifts in just before the lunch crowd,
ordering the blue plate special
without even asking what it is.
there are a dozen more like them—
folks whose habits give them away,
predictable as the daily noon whistle.
but one afternoon,
in the lull before the dinner rush,
when business slows to a crawl
and charlotte’s busy in the kitchen
setting up the next day’s salads and
watching
oprah
on her tiny tv,
an unfamiliar lady breezes in.
she has auburn chin-length hair
and a beige suit with matching pumps.
she’s probably mam’s age,
only thinner, prettier.
her heels click toward
a two-top in the corner.
she opens her briefcase on the table,
unloads a black leather binder,
clicks a fancy silver pen,
writes across a smooth, new page.
i mosey over. i got that from charlotte—
she’s always moseying here
and moseying there.
not looking up, the lady says,
i’d like a cup of earl grey tea with lemon,
a chef salad with extra swiss, no salami,
and italian dressing on the side, please.
i can tell from the flat, twangless
slap of her syllables
she’s a northerner, like me.
after bringing her order,
i study the northern lady
from the register.
she removes a single pit
from her lemon wedge,
holds it over her steaming mug, squeezing.
then she dunks her tea bag in the cup,
flattens it against her spoon,
places it gently on the saucer.
when i refill her cup with hot water
and leave her a brand-new bag,
she looks up, finally.
she has pretty eyes—
green as the shamrocks
taped to the windows—
and a small, delicate face.
tucking her hair behind one ear
she glances at my belly and smiles,
saying something about a bud being snug,
and a sprat—whatever
that
is—
doing something inside a pickle jug.
i haven’t got the slightest idea
what she’s talking about.
i just stand there,
dumb as dust.
the northern lady smiles.
i’m sorry, that’s a line
from a poem called
you’re.
i was imagining that’s how
your baby must be feeling,
tucked in that cozy space.
i nod, relax.
where’d that poem come from?
she reaches in her briefcase,
removes a small, thin book.
i glance at the cover and
recognize the poet’s name—
she’s the one who offed herself.
here, keep this. it’s an extra.
i bought it at the airport this morning.
i forgot my copy at home.
i’m not an organized traveler.
ariel, i say, touching the cover.
ariel
by sylvia plath.
my baby kicks and kicks
like she’s running
the new york marathon.
* * *
that night i drink black decaf tea,
something charlotte got me to try,