Nearer Than the Sky (15 page)

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Authors: T. Greenwood

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Family Life, #Psychological, #General

BOOK: Nearer Than the Sky
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JUNE 1, 1964. Los Angeles, California.
A blue room.
A
mobile of impossible butterfly wings. I wasn’t born yet when Benny stopped breathing. He got tangled up in his blanket, and he was blue. Ma said it took her almost twenty minutes to get him breathing again. That if she hadn’t been trained in CPR, he was sure to have died. That she breathed her own life into him, and that it was her breath that brought him back. Benny would have died. But she breathed her own life into him. She breathed her own life. In this story, in every story, she’s always the hero.
I
used to believe that the lightning chose me. That it sought me out. That its touch was not an accident at all, but something devised by the sky. Maybe this made the reality of my mother disappearing into the Foodmart less painful. Maybe it helped to blur the sharp edges of the picture of her in her polka-dot dress with Lily on her hip. Maybe it just helped explain something I didn’t have words for then, and still don’t now. This I know: It allowed me to forgive the sky, when I couldn’t forgive my mother.
Sometimes, I still imagine that it was not an accident at all. That had my mother taken the time to roll the shopping cart back into the store with her instead of walking away, her white pumps clicking against the pavement, then I might not have been privy to the same truths. And if the monsoons had already passed and I had simply sat there until she returned, bringing me a coloring book or a candy bar, then I might not have known how to be careful in our house. Sometimes I think that the lightning was a gift. That the light’s invisible hands offered me the cold heat of understanding. Every now and then, I make an offering to the sky, express my gratitude with arms outstretched under rain or snow or sun.
Here I am at nineteen: far away from home. July in the mountains. The Birches Hotel looks like a paper cutout castle in the misty afternoon. I imagine that when the rain comes, it will dissolve into the clear blue lake below. Like paper or sugar or sand.
The help is not supposed to go inside the castle, except through the employee entrance in the rear. Not supposed to swim in this water. And certainly not supposed to walk barefoot toward the forbidden golf course, still wearing the uniform that smells of starch. But still, I walk with purpose across the parking lot where someone is carving a swan from a giant block of ice. I walk past the girls’ dormitory where I am living with two other college girls in a room that is smaller than my bedroom in Mountainview. Where there is one phone in the hallway that sometimes goes dead before you are done talking. We really are alone here. All around us are mountains and lakes. The nearest town is almost ten miles away, and none of us have cars.
I take my hair down from its tight ponytail and let it fall down my back. Loose and warm on my bare arms. I step carefully onto the manicured lawn. I am tentative because I fear that the green may be deceiving. It could be soft crushed velvet or emerald shards that would cut the tender bottoms of my feet.
Because of the sky, the men in their plaid pants and bright yellow shirts are all inside the clubhouse, drinking thick liquor in fishbowl glasses, arguing with their candy-colored wives. The golf course is empty except for the carts, which could be carriages for ghosts today in the thick mist. I step around one of the empty carts and raise my face to the sky. I try to conjure a storm just by wishing.
I can’t remember why I came here except that it meant I would not have to go home the first summer after my freshman year. I didn’t expect that it would be like this. The brochures only showed the castle and the lake nestled in the mountains like a fairytale place. They didn’t mention that we would be stuffed into small, hot rooms, or that we would be fed the leftover food we served in the chandeliered dining room.
But as I walk across the dewy grass and the air is thick with electricity, this feels like freedom. Ma tried to convince me to come home. She was lonely now without Daddy. I knew the familiar acid taste of her pleas in the back of my throat, so I held the phone to my bad ear, and her voice was only a muffled hum arriving weak and pathetic after traveling through the tunnel of too many years.
I walk across the impossibly green rolling hills of dreams. I can barely see in front of me for all the haze. The rain comes slowly this time, beading up on my hair and skin. It tastes green. When the thunder rolls under my feet and through the thick white air, I am not afraid. I have an agreement with the sky. An understanding.
This is freedom,
I think,
spinning barefoot on someone else’s playground.
And I trust the sky, because I can’t trust anything else.
T
he next morning, I awoke feeling purposeful. I walked outside to the shed, wearing my nightgown and a pair of boots I found in the garage. They were probably Daddy’s, they were so big. The mother cat was lying defeated on her back, the four remaining kittens purring and burrowing into her. When she realized I was there, she opened her eyes and lifted her head.
“I brought you some food,” I said. I’d gone to the grocery store and bought several cans of the same kind of cat food I bought for Jessica and a plastic food and water bowl.
I set the bowl down near her, and she struggled to free herself from the hungry kittens. She managed to get away from them and they squeaked and crawled on top of one another, looking for her nipples. She ate until the bowl was empty, drank the water almost as quickly.
“I’ll bring you some more later,” I said when she looked up at me. “Now feed your babies.”
When I called the animal shelter they said I could bring her and the kittens by in the afternoon. They assured me that they’d be able to find homes for all of them, that they wouldn’t be separated until after the babies were weaned. I figured I’d stop by to say good-bye to Rosey on my way and then come back and get a taxi to the bus station. The buses ran twice a day to Phoenix. If I took the five o’clock, I’d make it to the airport in plenty oftime to catch a red-eye flight.
I couldn’t wait for the lab tests to come back on the house. I already knew what they would say anyway. I couldn’t stand another night of sleeping on my mother’s couch, being awakened by the train every hour when it shook the house. I couldn’t bear another morning in that kitchen, eating macaroni and cheese out of the pot, or another moment staring at our old things. I missed the café. I missed the cabin. I missed Peter.
When I called to tell him I was coming home, he knew not to ask about Ma. He must have heard the explanations in my voice as I sat staring out the kitchen window at the field of dead sunflowers. He only said, “Good. Joe will be fine here alone. I’ll be at the airport at six.” And then, when the lump in my throat grew so large I was afraid I might choke, he whispered, “I love you, you know.”
I felt almost happy as I gathered my things from around the house. I picked up my socks and T-shirts, put all of my dirty clothes in the washing machine in the garage. There is nothing worse than bringing home a suitcase of dirty clothes. I finished the orange juice and milk. Took everything else that might go bad out of the fridge. I decided to leave the furniture in the rooms, though; let Ma deal with it when she got home. I didn’t want to expend another ounce of my energy moving things around this house. I left the box of syringes on the table for Ma to find. The open lid was like an open closet door, spilling her secrets, and I didn’t care anymore.
When the laundry was done, I went outside to gather up the mama cat and her kittens. Most of them were sleeping, and the mother was cleaning herself. I set down the cardboard box lined with an old blanket and put my hands on my hips. “I know you’re not going to like this. But I haven’t got much of a choice.” And then I reached down and started to lift the sleeping kittens by the scruffs of their necks and set them gently in the box. The mother stopped licking her paws herself and looked at me. “Relax,” I said. “You’re coming too.” And she barely resisted when I lifted her up, feeling the sharp angles of her ribs, and set her inside. She only walked around in circles until she settled down, her belly exposed and ready for when they woke up.
I carried the box carefully out of the shed, afraid to disturb them any more than I already had. I heard the phone ringing as I closed the shed door. “Shit,” I said. I set the box down and ran into the house. Ma didn’t have an answering machine, and I thought it might be Peter calling to get my flight information.
“Hello?” I said, out of breath.
“Indie, it’s Rich.”
My heart thudded loudly.
“Hey,” I said.
“Indie, I don’t know how to tell you this.” Silence. “Christ.”
“Oh God,” I said. “Is it Violet?” I was conscious of my breaths. My heart was pounding so loudly, I could feel it in my temples and throat and chest. “Rich, what happened?”
“It’s your ma. Something terrible. God, I don’t know how to say this.”
“Ma?” I asked. “What’s wrong with
Ma?”
“It happened this morning when she went to the Safeway to get some formula for Violet. She took my car. She must not have been paying attention. She went right through a red light.”
“I don’t understand,” I said, bending over, my stomach feeling tight and sick.
“She couldn’t have felt anything. The other car, it was one of those new SUVs. The impact of it . . .” Rich’s voice was soft, fading. “Are you okay? Please say something.”
“She just got out of the hospital. She’s
fine.”
“Indie, there was an accident.” Rich’s voice was far away. It felt like snow, falling softly. Like a bird’s wings, it was so gentle. “She ran a red light.”
NOVEMBER 10, 1999. Phoenix, Arizona.
My mother pulls out of the Safeway parking lot into traffic. It is Wednesday, and everyone is headed somewhere. It is hot outside, and she has the air conditioning on so high, it is tickling the small hairs on her arms. Maybe she is listening to the radio. Tapping her fingers on the steering wheel with the rhythm of the music, or simply with impatience. There is a case of formula for Violet on the seat next to her. She is stuck in traffic only a few blocks from Rich and Lily’s house. She peers into the rearview mirror to check her hair. There is one curly silver hair that will not lay flat. She runs her hand gently across the top of her head, smoothing. She touches her pale pink lips. Opens her mouth just a little. She is only looking for lipstick on her teeth when the light turns green. And then she is moving again, with all of the other cars, a weekday, early morning parade. The station wagon in front of her is full of children, two of them are looking at her, making faces. The boy sticks up his middle finger, flipping her off. Brats. The light ahead turns red, and the station wagon comes to an abrupt stop. She steps on the brake and Rich’s car lurches forward, the case of formula almost falling to the floor. Irritated, she makes a face at the child who is still looking at her through the station wagon’s rear window. The light turns green, and she is moving again, and she is impatient now to get back to the house. She leans over to adjust the case of formula, which has slipped forward. It is heavy, and it takes a couple of pushes to get it back on the seat. When she looks up again, the station wagon is farther ahead of her now, already through the light, but the child is still pressed to the glass, sticking his fat pink finger up at her in an easy gesture. She feels her skin grow hot, and she steps on the gas. But before she can decipher the meaning of yellow turning red, it is too late. Before she can remember the word for
stop,
the color for
wait,
the sound of
accident
the station wagon has turned right. Before any of this registers, the only color she sees is the blue of her knuckles and of the metal as it comes through her door. And then it is over. Just like that.
T
HREE
I
t began snowing that night. The temperature dropped down to twenty degrees and clouds moved across the mountains like a dark woolen coat. I stood outside after Rich called and watched them moving, covering the peaks’ shoulders. Enclosing them. The sky turned an impossible shade of violet before it grew black, and my fingers were almost numb with the cold. I had turned off all the lights in the house, and the blackness was absolute. The snow clouds swallowed the stars, and
moon
meant nothing other than a faint memory of something bright and white. It was so dark I could have had my eyes closed. I could have been asleep instead of standing in my mother’s backyard.
Peter was on his way, flying for the first time in years, so that he could be with me by morning.
Here he is in the midnight airport: buying a plane ticket and a magazine he knows he won’t be able to read. Sitting in the bar near the gate, digging in his pockets for stray dollars to pay for the beer. Smiling at the waitress who is distracted, tired.
Airports are the loneliest places to be at midnight.
Ma’s body had already been sent to the crematorium. I couldn’t imagine what kind of place that might be. When I tried to picture the building, all I could conjure was a shopping plaza in Phoenix.
Target, Bank of America, Safeway, Crematorium.
I pictured neon-lit aisles and cashiers in aprons. Gumball machines that dispensed ashes when you put in a quarter and turned the knob. Fake tattoos or Superballs.
It started snowing that night. In a year it is easy to forget how cold winter is. Seasonal amnesia is the only way to survive in climates like this. It is almost impossible to remember the realities of winter when the sun is shining and the sky is bright. I turned on the back porch light and made my way to the shed, where I had left the kittens when the phone rang. They were crying and trying to stay warm. I carried the box into the house and set it next to the couch. I found another blanket and offered it to the mother cat, who would not look at me. I lay down on my stomach on the couch, my head resting on one of Ma’s stiffpillows, watching them wriggle and squirm.
Peter said Chuck Moony would watch Jessica and the house. That he and Leigh would stay there to keep an eye on things while he was gone. He said that Joe could take care of the restaurant, that everything would be fine. But I knew that he was only thinking about getting on the airplane. That he wasn’t talking about the things that wouldn’t be fine. Remembering the time we almost fell from the sky is easier than remembering cold. It’s the kind of recollection that lives in your knees instead of inside your bones. When you think
plane crash,
there is something tangible. It is easier to imagine than
freezing
or
numb.
Ma would be cremated wearing one of Lily’s dresses. She hadn’t brought any dresses with her to Phoenix. Nothing appropriate. It struck me as almost funny that Ma would be cremated in someone else’s clothing. She bought all of her clothes from catalogs because she didn’t like the idea that other people had been inside the clothes that hung on the racks at stores.
The mama cat was cleaning the kittens one by one, moving her tongue across their small warm bodies until their fur shined. Indiscriminately, as if each of them were the same. Outside it was snowing. The snowflakes were so big they could have been white petals from a cold flower instead of snow. I reached down and touched the mama cat’s head. She looked up at me, annoyed, and I moved my hand out of the box.
Peter would close his eyes when the plane started to taxi down the runway. He would lean his head back against the headrest, put his hands on the tops of his thighs. When the plane roared and accelerated, he would pull the seatbelt so tight it would cut into his stomach so he could concentrate on this pain instead of the possibility of falling.
When I’d asked how Lily was, Rich said,
Not well. She’s not doing so well at all.
Outside it was snowing cold white petals. And they didn’t melt when they touched the ground, because the ground wasn’t warm. The earth was frozen and unyielding. The hole I’d dug to bury the kitten in was shallow. I couldn’t dig deep enough into the reluctant earth for a proper grave. I tried to give the mama cat some more food and water, but she didn’t seem strong enough to crawl out of the box.
Please,
I pleaded.
You need to eat.
But she just lay there, and the kittens sucked, sucked, sucked on her red nipples.
When the wheels lifted and the plane rose off the ground, Peter’s heart might dive a little. It might plunge in preparation for the falling of the body. He would not smile at the flight attendant in her nylon stockings and navy blue when her eyes scanned across the other midnight passengers. And she wouldn’t notice anyway. Fear to her was simply an expression on every third or fourth face.
I wondered about the bones. About what happens to the bones after the fire. Did they burn too? Did they crumble? Did they resist when the body fell away, an insistent skeletal shadow until the last moment?
The vents blew hot air across the room, but there were cold pockets that you could fall into if you weren’t careful. I walked barefoot and stupid into one when I went to make some tea. I stood for a moment in this cold space and it felt like I had no fingers or toes. In the other room, I could hear the kittens suckling, sucking.
Peter would feign sleep. He might pull the plastic shade, lean his head against the window, and pretend that he was only dreaming. But each bump in the sky would startle his eyes open. Each cough, each laugh, each bell of ice ringing inside someone’s plastic cup would make him remember where he was tonight. And even when the plane landed, he would not trust the ground beneath his feet.
I thought about the bones. When I thought about Ma’s death, I only saw the purple swirl of a borrowed dress, and bones crumbling like snow.
 
In the living room, I pulled the kittens off the mother. It was like unsnapping a dress. I lifted the cat onto my lap and forced her eyes open wide with my fingers.
What is the matter with you? Do you want to die?
And then I cradled her in my arms, my hair wet with tears and stuck in my mouth.
I’m sorry. Come on, please let me feed you.
And outside, the falling snow made everything white.
 
When I heard the taxi door close and saw Peter walking up the driveway, my head started to buzz. It was like seeing a ghost in work boots and jeans. Even far away his posture was as familiar as my own hands. I went outside without bothering to put on a jacket. I ran down the driveway, my feet pounding against the cold ground until I was inside the warm circle of his arms. We stood there for a few minutes, staring at my mother’s house.
“You’ll catch pneumonia. Let’s get you inside, okay?”
I nodded and we started to walk back up the driveway. His jacket smelled like the woods at home, like he’d carried a bit of the forest with him. I leaned into him, allowed his arm to curl around my shoulder, and breathed the woodfire smell of him. He opened the door and we went into the kitchen.
“Brrr,” he said. “What is it Chuck says? Colder than a witch’s tit?”
“No, that’s the right way to say it. He says, ‘Colder than a
widget’s
tit.’ ”
“Well, it’s nice and warm in here,” he said, and took off his jacket. He draped it over the back of one of the kitchen chairs and sat down.
The first winter we spent in our cabin, we didn’t know a thing about keeping warm. The apartments we had lived in when we were first together were always equipped with clanking, hissing radiators. The first morning I woke up in the middle of the night and there were crystals of ice forming on Peter’s beard. We learned quickly how to keep a fire stoked. How to treat the woodstove like a hungry infant in need of middle-of-the-night feedings. We learned the pricelessness of a down comforter and thermal underwear.
“You want some coffee?” I asked.“Ma doesn’t have a coffeepot, but I bought some instant.”
He looked at me blankly for a second at the mention of Ma. “Please,” he said.
I turned on the stove and watched the coils glow red underneath the teakettle. I concentrated on the jar of instant coffee, on the label peeling away from the glass, on the sparkling crystals inside.
“The house looks different from what I remember,” Peter said.
“I had to bring half of the furniture back inside the house from the front porch and the backyard,” I said.
“Why was the furniture out there?”
I shrugged my shoulders.
I pulled the water off the burner before it whistled. I poured the water over the coffee and stirred each cup until the crystals turned the water a muddy brown, and then remembered there wasn’t any milk; I’d finished it when I was getting ready to go home. Before Rich called.
“There’s no milk,” I said, my hands shaking. I turned around and looked at Peter, feeling helpless. Apologetic.
His cheeks were speckled with coarse black hairs, an unshaven shadow. His black hair was messy, his cheeks still blushed pink from the chill.
“It’s okay,” he said. “Really.” He reached for the coffee cup and my shoulders started to shake.
“I’m not used to this,” I said.
“I know.” He nodded and took the coffee cup from me. He set it on the table and reached for my hand, pulled me into his lap, and touched the top of my head.
“I’m not sad,” I said, my chest heaving. “Why don’t I feel sad?”
He didn’t answer; he only pulled me in closer to him. He touched my eyelids with his fingers and pressed my good ear into his soft sweater. And for a few moments, he gave me complete silence and darkness, with only the fading scent of pine to remind me that I was alive.
Because there was no food in Ma’s cupboards, we drove into town that night to get some pizza. It was nice to sit in the passenger’s seat again. To not worry about hidden spots of ice or an elk appearing in our headlights. It was a bright night. The clouds had cleared and the sky was littered with stars, suspended like shining marionettes.
We decided to go to Anthony’s, the place just north of the tracks, the one with wooden booths scarred with graffiti and wallpaper that looked like bookshelves. There were pool tables in the back and they served the pizza with bowls of ranch dressing for dipping. In high school my girlfriends and I could get served beer there. There was a guy who worked there who would give us paper Coke cups filled with Budweiser instead of soda. We’d get drunk in the back room and play video games with the tokens he slipped us with our change.
Peter parked the car next to the train station and helped me tie the wool scarf tightly around my neck. I felt like a mummy.
“I swear, you’re going to get sick unless you bundle up,” he said.
I breathed the smell of wool for a second and then pulled the scarf down, uncovering my mouth. “What about you?” I said, motioning to his bare neck and mittenless hands.
“I’ve got a natural scarf,” he said, rubbing his scruffy chin and neck.
“Are you growing a beard again this winter?”
“Depends,” he said. “Will you still kiss me?”
“I suppose,” I said. I actually liked it when Peter let his beard grow. It wasn’t prickly like you’d imagine.
“Kiss me now?” he asked, leaning toward me.
I kissed him and felt everything grow weak and warm. Peter still has the ability to make me feel the way I used to feel when we first met. Most people wouldn’t believe it. Fourteen years is a long time to share a life. And there are times, of course, when one of us grows bored or annoyed. What used to be butterflies may now be something less striking than the orange and black of a monarch. Something more common and predictable, a loping gray moth with slow beating wings. But its wings still flicker.
We were greeted by a blast of hot air when we opened the door to the pizza place. The music coming from the jukebox was loud, the rhythm steady underneath our feet. It was busy inside. There were groups of high school kids huddled inside the wooden booths. Little kids crawling across the big wooden tables reaching for another piece of pizza.
“Same as usual?” he asked.
“Mmm hmm,” I nodded, distracted by a couple in the far corner. The girl was probably only fifteen or sixteen. The boy looked older. They were sitting on the same side of a booth. His arm was stretched across the back of the seat. She was crying softly, and he was staring straight ahead. Her face was blotchy with tears. She could have been inside her bedroom instead of a pizza place full of people. She was fiddling with a pair of pink mittens and crying. A bent silver pizza pan with two remaining slices was on the table in front of them. He reached across her and grabbed a napkin from the dispenser. He handed it to her absently and kept staring ahead as she blew her nose. Finally, he stood up and started to walk toward the door. She stood up and followed behind him. When he turned around, he shook his head
no.
I watched her shoulders tremble and then she sat back down in the booth alone. He walked briskly past Peter and me, hands shoved into his pockets and head lowered. The girl looked helplessly after him, wiping at her eyes with the crisp white napkin. It made my heart ache.

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