Bone Dance (14 page)

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Authors: Joan Boswell,Joan Boswell

BOOK: Bone Dance
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“I considered it, but I'd be waiting in line behind all the married couples. Talk about having Methuselah for a mother.”

“Not adopting, you ninny, giving it up for adoption.”

Tears stung Janet's eyes. Marie mistook her silence as a licence to continue.

“It's not like you couldn't have married, if you'd set your mind to it. You had some boyfriends. You just scared them all off with your overwhelming desire to have kids. John says guys can smell that desperation vibe a mile away.”

“Just which one would you have suggested I marry, Marie?” Janet struggled to steady her voice, glacial ice infusing each successive word. “The one who finally confessed, after six months of dating, that he was already married? Or perhaps Tom, who was blatantly and continuously unfaithful? Probably Larry, right? You both liked him, didn't believe me when I told you he favoured ending our arguments with his raised fist.”

“Jeesh, Jan, I didn't mean to upset you. It's just that raising kids is so damn hard, and I have John to help me. I can't imagine doing it alone. It'd be simply impossible.”

“You think I haven't heard that argument before? Every goddamned, well-meaning parent from here to Kalamazoo has told me that! You know what my answer is to you and the rest of them? You already have your kids! How impossible would your life be without them? Imagine that!” Janet hung up the phone.

Launching herself off the sofa, she padded into the kitchen in search of a nice, soothing cup of herbal tea. The phone rang again, but seeing her sister-in-law's number on the display panel, Janet refused to answer it. She didn't want to explain herself to Marie, or anyone else, any more. Sure, she could have married, Marie was right. But a stable, calm environment was important for children. How many of her mother's friends had languished in acrimonious matrimony? And look how many of her own friends' marriages had expired before the warranties on their wedding gifts. Janet sighed. More steam was now shooting from the kettle's spout than from her ears.

She'd really packed on the pounds. A few months ago, her morning snack would have been ice cream and a hand-full of cookies or a box of snack crackers. With the help of a registered dietician and strict adherence to her prescribed food plan, the cravings had subsided. On top of that, Janet's rising excitement had all but banished thoughts of eating.

Eyeing a frosty carton of Sara Lee cherry cheesecake, Janet was tempted right now. Instead, she firmly closed the refrigerator door with her spreading hips, stopping to admire the ultrasound photo stuck to its front panel. The baby's position during the procedure had prevented a determination of its sex. She'd always wanted a girl—but at this stage either would be welcome. She traced the shape of the baby's head from the forehead to the base of the skull and then gently tapped the location of the heart. “See you soon,” she whispered.

Janet took her cup of lightly steeped Lemon Zinger tea into the guest room. This was where she had stored things for the baby. There were neat piles of soft, thin face cloths and receiving blankets. “You can never have enough of these spit-up blankies,” her cousin Diane had advised. She fingered the fuzzy warmth of sleepers in shades of mint and yellow and peach, burying her nose in the scent of the Ivory-laundered fabric. She recounted the number of tiny, white diaper shirts, hoping a dozen would be sufficient. Janet wanted to have the basics on hand, because you never knew about the timing of a baby's delivery. “Be Prepared” was still a good motto for her life, Janet thought.

A musical mobile of woolly, pastel lambs hung from a ceiling hook above the window where a spider plant had swung in the breeze. Janet twisted the mobile's mechanism to start the hushed strains of “Rock-a-bye Baby” and angled her grandmother's rocking chair at the window so she could see the school playground across the street.

Her little house had been a steal ten years ago—not many people, it seemed, enjoyed the squeals of happy children at play the way Janet did. She'd recently sold it, contents and all, at a handsome profit to an engineer arriving from Pakistan. Her baby would be starting out life with all new things, in a brand-new home. So they wouldn't have to move until after
the baby arrived, Janet had negotiated a rent-back agreement with the new owner, who was amenable since he was still waiting for his immigration papers.

Janet propped her feet on the corner of the spare bed, sipped her tea and watched the shenanigans of the afternoon recess crowd. She knew she should rest. All her friends had warned her.

“You think you're tired now? Ha! Wait till that baby comes.”

“Sleep through the night? We're still waiting! Start praying for that miracle now, Janet!”

Like the fasting monk petitioning God for the gift of His grace, she knew what the real miracle was. At night, when she was able to quell her elation and anticipation, dropping off into a fitful sleep, Janet saw it in her dreams. She was working diligently and reverently on the day-to-day care of her infant, she smelled its newborn warmth, caressed its downy cap of hair, heard it suckle.

The soft notes of the lullaby and the cooing of the mourning doves on the hydro lines soothed Janet's busy mind. She had waited so long, had thought perhaps her dream of a child would never materialize. But her delivery day was near.

Shrill ringing jarred Janet from her thoughts. She snatched up the portable phone. It was Michelle, the director of the neighbourhood Youth Centre where she was a volunteer.

“Just wanted to make sure you hadn't gone off to the hospital yet. I know you've started your Mat Leave. How are you feeling?”

“No baby yet, but I'm ready for it to happen,” Janet said. She heard the rolling wheels of a desk chair and the hum of a printer.

“You'll be in later then? Remember, today's the day Crystal's bringing in her special guest.”

Janet flashed on an image of Crystal, a pretty child with mocha-coloured skin, solemn brown eyes and a mane of corkscrewed curls. A Grade Four student, she showed initiative and leadership potential during the Centre's programs—this undoubtedly because she was the eldest of five. It saddened Janet to see a child whose spirit was so flat and leaden. She appeared to carry the weight of the world on her slight shoulders.

The only time Janet recalled seeing Crystal smile was several months ago. On that day, she had brought in a picture of the new baby in her mommy's tummy. She had been animated and enthused, hopeful—yet resigned to the heavier responsibilities.

When Janet asked her if she was going to have a baby brother or a baby sister, Crystal had whispered, “We don't know for sure. But Travis says it better be a boy, he don't father no bit . . . well, um—girls.”

“I've got a few things to do early this afternoon, but I'll be there in time to set the food out before the kids arrive,” Janet said to Michelle.

Janet's official role in the After School Program was to feed the kids a snack and help them with their homework. Her greatest contribution, she felt, was as a sounding board, listening to them tell of their day's accomplishments and troubles—the idealized fifties-style mom waiting with chocolate-chip cookies and milk, a smile and a hug.

“Is there any chance that you could come in a bit early? We have a little something for you,” Michelle said.

Janet smiled. “A little something” she now realized was code for “we want to give you a baby gift.”

“Sure, see you between three and three fifteen?”

It was quiet across the street. Recess was over. Janet struggled out of the low-slung, armless rocker.
What to Expect
When You're Expecting
and all the other baby bibles urged pregnant women to have their bags packed well in advance of their due dates. Janet checked her list of basic necessities, placed the last few items into the suitcase and zipped it shut. Bumping it down the stairs, Janet wheeled the case into the front hall and parked it beside her black brief case and the brand-new diaper bag.

She pulled on the navy-blue wool coat that barely covered her new girth. Yes, Janet thought as she squeezed behind the steering wheel of her silver Camry, the decision to volunteer at the youth centre had been a fortuitous one. Life was pretty good—when you stopped thinking and hoping and stewing—and set some goals for yourself. Things were working out, with only a few alterations to her long-held plans. Janet's only regret was that her parents wouldn't be around to watch this grandchild grow up.

The wait at the doctor's office wasn't any longer than usual for an old-style family physician who still insisted on delivering his own patients' babies. Florence, Weatherly's nurse and wife, directed Janet into the examination room with a kindly pat on the arm after their obligatory trip to the scales and after the “filling of the cup”, as Florence so delicately put it.

“How are you today, dear?” Weatherly shuffled through lab results and pages in her file, not meeting Janet's eyes. “Any complaints?”

“I've been tired and achy. My ankles swell, and the back pain has returned.”

“Well, that's to be expected. You can try lying on the hard floor, rather than the chesterfield. You still going to those
Aquafit classes?” he peered over the top of his half-moon glasses long enough to see Janet shake her head.

“They ended two weeks ago.”

“Keep up the walking then.” Weatherly plopped onto a stainless steel stool and gave Janet his full attention. “Good news, bad news, my dear. Your weight seems to have topped out. That's a good sign. Did you follow through with the referral to the dietician?”

Janet nodded assent.

“Very good. Important to take control of your carbohydrate and sugar intake at this stage. The bad news is your blood pressure is still slightly elevated, which concerns me. I'd like to see you again in two weeks. I know you're against the use of drugs, but we may need the meds to get things moving in the right direction. At this juncture, it's best that you're off work. See Flo on your way out, she's got the letter you requested.”

With that, Janet was dismissed, and Weatherly was out the door to his next patient.

She found the Youth Centre's director sorting craft supplies in the storage cupboard.

“Janet!” Michelle wiped her dusty palms across the seat of her jeans. “We need to talk. Feel like a cup of herbal tea? A cold drink, maybe?”

Uh-oh. Am I in trouble here? Janet scrambled to recall all of her recent contacts with the kids, searching for any incidents that may have given cause for concern. Hand pressed to the small of her back, Janet struggled to keep up with Michelle as she hurried down a short hall to the kitchen. It
wasn't like Michelle to take time out for chats, she was far too busy trying to hold the Centre together on meagre funds and waning volunteer interest. What was going on?

“I'm sorry, I should have made time for your annual review earlier, but . . . you know how it is around here.” Michelle shrugged and smiled, setting out mismatched mugs for tea and plugging in the electric kettle. “Can you tell me how this experience has been for you?”

God, I hate these open-ended questions, she thought. What did Michelle want her to say?

“It's been great, very rewarding.” Janet ran her index finger, back and forth, in a semicircle along the base of the mug facing her.

“Well, that's good. I have to admit I have been concerned,” Michelle said.

Janet's eyes shot up to meet Michelle's warm hazel ones. “What about?”

“During your application interview, you mentioned how upset you were over the end of your match as a Big Sister, how you wanted this volunteer position to be a less intimate one, more of an arm's length relationship.”

Janet nodded. She had been matched with a seven-year-old girl, Ashley, and it had been a heart-wrenching experience. The Little Sister had told Janet that people were hurting her. A child welfare investigation uncovered both sexual abuse by an uncle and physical abuse by her mother's live-in boyfriend. Taken into protective custody, Ashley had eventually been adopted by her foster parents, a couple in their late forties.

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