Authors: Mary Helen Specht
Maybe it was growing up with a father whose ambitions had been so thwarted. A father who just couldn't understand how he'd ended up an obscure novelist teaching too many courses at the community college, still hoping, even at age seventy, that one of his unpublished manuscripts (which had come to outnumber his published ones) was a breakthrough waiting to happen.
Whatever the reason, Molly set her sights low. She liked waking up and knowing exactly what to expect from the day. And she liked there to be a sound track.
“Whatcha got playing this week?” asked Sanjeet, who was working on a project to determine the effect of polluted rain on underground spring water in the Edwards Aquifer. He was one of the grad students Molly called “the perennials,” whose projects dragged on and on, delaying their commencement sometimes for years. Above his computer was tacked a piece of paper labeled
THE PERIODIC TABLE OF AWESOMENESS
with the boxes of chemical elements replaced by things like Christopher Walken, mullets, ray guns, and bounty hunters. The microscope at the station next to him had a loose connection and someone had posted a sign on its neck:
PLEASE DO NOT MOVE ME
.
I AM A DELICATE FLOWER
.
Everything in these lab stations was white, including the chairs and tables and cubbies. It made Molly feel as though she were walking through a cloud.
“Hayes Carll,” she told Sanjeet, counting the number of rubber gloves in the drawer labeled
GLOVES
,
PENS
,
FORCEPS
,
RAZOR BLADES
.
“Sell him to me.” Sanjeet was leaning back precariously, chair balanced on one leg, lab coat half on, half off.
“He's the only musician under forty who can pull off a rose-embroidered western shirt,” she said, letting him listen to the rockabilly twang on one of her earbuds before closing up the drawer and marking -10 on her clipboard. “You guys got everything you need?”
“We need to buy you a drink,” Sanjeet said, nodding to include his “butt-mate”âthe graduate student whose bench station was back-to-back with his and whose gray-eyed gaze was intent on his computer screen. “We've been here since six this morning working on a grant application, and it's time to move on.”
“I have plans.”
Molly had felt awkward around Sanjeet ever since the Climate Institute graduation party the year before when, after too much mystery punch, he'd beckoned her into a corner to show off the half-finished tattoo of Nikola Tesla on his back. In an inexplicable desire to match him, Molly had turned around and, without a second thought, dropped trou to reveal the words scrolled across her ass in a looped script:
Proud to Be in Texas Where Bob Wills Is Still the King
. Sanjeet pretended he didn't remember.
As Molly walked away, trying to negotiate a turn at the Faraday cage, she felt herself slip, feet escaping from under her, and there was nothing she could do but turn her hip so that she landed on its pocket of flesh. From this new position sprawled on the floor, the bulletin board that loomed over her, filled with scientific papers and signs warning of biohazards and radiation, seemed suddenly ominous.
“Look who's already started tippling.” Sanjeet grabbed her by both elbows, lifting her up. “What happened, wobbles?”
“Too much energy, not enough fundamentals,” she said, trying to smile despite her throbbing hip. Trying not to show her fear.
The janitors did their job too well
, she told herself, staring at the waxed floor.
“Hey, have I ever shown you my moon walk?” Sanjeet started to slide backward. “Check it out.”
She watched him dance, Sanjeet's slide moves causing him to recede from where she stood, still a little unsteady, one hand against the wall, the other reaching helplessly into thin air.
A
s a child, whenever Flannery tripped and skinned her knee walking up the porch steps, or bit her tongue falling from the monkey bars, or belly flopped sailing off the diving board of the swimming pool in Rose Park, her father would always say the same thing:
You're a tough cookie. Tough cookies don't cry.
And so she didn't. She became proud of the little white scars adorning her knobby knees as she soaped them in the bath before bedtime. Her mother told her, while putting on makeup before another performance of
Guys and Dolls
, that scars migrated up the body over time, showing Flan the C-section scar on her belly and claiming it had moved there from her foot. Flannery liked this idea and imagined being old with a face crisscrossed by mutilations like the prizefighters on television.
While her sister, Molly, occasionally played tennis at the public courts in their neighborhood growing up, Flannery was drawn to sports with contact. She played defense in soccer, slicing her cleats through other girls' legs; forward in basketball, protecting the rebound with her elbows; and digger in volleyball, her hip bones hitting the floor with a loud smack. She was a tough cookie.
Then, her first heartbreak arrived, initially so painful she thought about nothing else for weeks, carrying around the wrenching loss of a beautiful, delicate archaeology student who had come home to
wait tables for the summer in the same Mexican restaurant where she worked all through high school serving plates of warm sopapillas. Months after their breakup, he drove back to visit her during fall vacation, parking his beater in her parents' driveway, long fingers combing through his well-picked Afro.
“Flan.” He pronounced it like the Mexican dessert, their own little joke, as he grabbed her into an awkward hug.
She hadn't planned this reaction but, standing there barefoot on her porch, she said, “You shouldn't have come.” Because as she'd seen him walk across the lawn, Flannery realized she'd already worked through the pain, discarded it or sealed it off like an oil well whose gush was over. Love, like all wounds, healed easily, she realized. Nothing was really at stakeâand not because she thought her life would be short, cut off by the genetic disease that stalked her childhood, but because she somehow felt assured of her invincibility, every new survival another testament to it.
Their parents had encouraged this way of thinking, hadn't they? Hadn't her father told the girls they would be all right? That they had nothing to worry about? Which was why Flannery had been startled by her father's words when she called in tears to tell Papa what she'd witnessed at Quack's.
“I know.”
She stopped sniffling. A darker foreboding replaced the tears, which had been made up mostly of fear because part of Flannery had expected her father, with all his stubbornness, to tell her, “No way, José.” She thought he would say, “Don't cry. Tough cookies don't cry.” But instead, the words that traveled through the phone were, “I hoped I'd be long gone before this happened.”
“But, Papa. I thought we didn't inherit the gene. I thought . . .”
“Who told you that?” As he spoke, she imagined him standing in the hallway, crouched over the old beige landline telephone still
perched on the hutch, a halo of family photographs above his head. “I never said that.”
“. . . I assumed . . .” Flannery let her voice trail off, confronted by her own lie.
If she'd really assumed that, then why, in graduate school, had she submitted to a neurological exam and psychological screening before letting a nurse draw two vials of blood, one for the genetic test and one for research? They'd required that Flan bring someone with her when she came for the results, so she told Santiago they were going to the clinic to find out if she was pregnant (and, as far as she knew, he still thought that). At the time, Flannery toyed with the idea that if she came out looking pale, ghastly, he would not think she'd received an HD gene's death sentence but the opposite. The life sentence of motherhood.
In the tiny office, a genetic counselor had showed her the two printouts, one at a time. The first allele: normal. And then, the second allele: normal. Flannery was confused by this way of doing it. Of using suspense. A game show where the alleles were doors behind which the prizes and punishments of inheritance lay in wait.
Returning to the clinic lobby, she'd seen Santiago before he saw her. He was engrossed in a midday talk show, legs tightly crossed, one knee resting on top of the other. Watching him, Flannery felt a wave of guilt for dragging him along, for trying to pretend that she wasn't in this thing alone.
“False alarm.”
Santiago neither smiled nor frowned in response to the news. “Let me buy you a beer before I head back to the office.” It was the summer between semesters, and she was crashing at his place in Boston while he interned as a grunt on a project with a Dutch architect.
They boarded the number 62 bus as it looped from the North End, with its redbrick and Italian restaurants, back through downtown. Santiago didn't ask why she was so quiet or badger her to reveal what was wrong. Loyalty and lack of judgment: these were the qualities they cultivated in each other then. The stops and starts of the bus jarred them back and forth, their shoulders bumping against each other. The woman across the aisle read something called
The Book of Tofu
as Flan watched historical graveyards flitter by, the pub where you could drink a Sam Adams while looking at his grave marker across the street. Flannery didn't really believe in an afterlife, but she couldn't help think how much better it would be to be buried out here, where American revolutionaries were buried. The dead were not hidden away, but slept among life, Bostonians walking past them on their way to work, right in the thick of things.
A fifty-fifty chance. It was almost too neat, too tidy. Of course the test was negative. Of course she was free of the gene. She was invincible. The fact that Flannery didn't possess the mutation had no effect on Molly's chances one way or the otherâFlannery knew enough about genetics to know that. The disease was maddeningly random in who it chose, but Flannery couldn't escape the feeling that her own thick skin, her own ability to heal, was somehow connected to the outcome of the test. That she had sucked up all that was strong and, in doing so, stolen her future from Molly, the family's delicate, rose-cheeked China doll.
On the phone with her father, Flannery began to understand that it might have been the other way around. Their parents never told Molly to be a tough cookie. They indulged and protected her and stroked her hair at night because they already knew. Molly didn't get Huntington's because she was weaker; maybe she was just treated that way because she had Huntington's.
At that moment, Flannery didn't think to ask how her father had known. Or why he'd never said anything before. “Maybe I'm wrong. I was jet-lagged and exhausted. Maybe it's nothing.”
“No.”
The word was like a hard flick to her sternum. “But Molly never wanted to get tested.” Flannery didn't know why she said this, why this mattered. The tests only revealed what was already there.
“Expect erratic behavior,” he told her. “Don't indulge it. You'll need to take her to the specialist as soon as possible because they have new drugs to slow the progression.”
“But, Papa, she doesn't seem to realize yet.”
“Oh.” There was a pause. “The worst isn't knowing what is going to happen to them, Flan; the worst is knowing that they know what will happen.”
There was another silence, and in that space flashed images of her mother, face resigned as fifteen-year-old Flannery changed her adult diaper, gently wiping and wiping until her mother shook. And Papa breaking his wristâhow it just hung limp like a sleeveâtrying to lift her mother from bed because, even near the end, he refused to hire help or put her in a home.
“You have to drive down from Abilene.” Flannery would only be here for a few months. She had a job in Nigeria. She had a life there.
“I can't,” said her father, in a whisper that sounded very old. “I'm in the middle of something. . . .” Papa spent his spare time writing literary westerns about assholes and tough guys. Once, after another rejection from a New York publishing house, Flannery asked why he never wrote anything based more on his own experiences. “Because I write about lives I never had, lived by men I could never be.”
“It's not like she doesn't have a husband,” said Flannery eventually, as if they were discussing a problem with a logical solution. “Brandon will be great.”
“Absolutely. Of course.”
They talked a while longer about nothing, then said good-bye and hung up as though having come to some satisfactory agreement about the sale of a used car, a lemon. Flannery walked to the bathroom and dry-heaved into the toilet.
Flan was not thinking about that phone conversation when Molly and Brandon picked her up at her run-down apartment complex on their way to Alyce's ranch for the homecoming party. No, she would not think about it. She would not search for signs of disease in her sister's movements as Molly jumped out of the car to let Flannery sit in the passenger seat, a rule the sisters had come up with years ago so neither would ever feel like a third wheel.
Instead, Flannery leaned back against the headrest and imagined Kunle, who would be riding a
danfo
at that very moment, crowded four to a seat in the rickety van painted with maxims like “Protected by the Blood” or “No Food for Lazy Man,” hurtling down the lawless, crumbling highway toward Lagos and his visa interview at the U.S. Consulate later that week. Kunle hated traveling. He usually chose a seat by the window if he could get it and, when it was his turn to lean back in the seat (it was too crowded for everyone to do so at one time), took his handkerchief and spread it over the lower half of his face, as if that could protect him from the dust and car exhaust and odor of close bodies.
“You're quiet,” said Molly from the backseat as they drove out of town on a well-maintained highway where the traffic laws were posted and clear.