Read She Poured Out Her Heart Online
Authors: Jean Thompson
“Yeah, that's what happens when you feed them. Are you hungry? I know it's early, but we might as well eat. People keep bringing food. Hot dishes. It's a Wisconsin thing. There's three potato and cheese casseroles. Venison. Pea salad. Half a ham. Apple cake. It goes on and on.”
Bonnie looked into the refrigerator. It was crowded with plastic ware, and serving dishes stacked one on top of the other. “Maybe a sandwich.”
“Go sit down, I'll bring everything out. I thought that's what we could do for dinner. Just kind of graze. It wouldn't seem right to start cooking in her kitchen. Though I guess sooner or later . . .” Bonnie took a 7UP from the fridge and went back into the dining room. She found a chair between two of the flower arrangements and removed the cards to read them. One appeared to be from somebody in Claudia's yoga class. The other was a name she recognized as one of Stan's old collaborators from the early days. When Haley came back in with the food, Bonnie asked where Stan was.
“Out in the studio. I wouldn't say he's doing so good. There's been some alcohol involved. I guess it's hardest on him. Not that we need to have a contest.”
“I'm glad you've been here,” Bonnie told her. “Now tell me what needs to be done. With the service and all.”
“Not that much. It's coming together.” The funeral would be in two days, at a Lutheran chapel that would allow Claudia's spiritual advisor to
conduct the service. Bonnie said she did not know that Claudia had a spiritual advisor and Haley said it was the woman who ran the yoga studio and gave mindfulness seminars. Close enough.
“There's going to be music, old Judy Collins songs, Leonard Cohen songs, things she enjoyed. There's some great pictures of her we can set out. It's going to be nice. It'll be something she would have liked.”
“It's not fair,” Bonnie said. “She was way too young.” She guessed she meant, she felt too young to have lost her mother. She found herself going back and forth between tears and anger. Both made her feel stupid and ineffectual.
“She didn't suffer. She didn't see it coming. That's the best way to go.”
“That's the horseshit second prize for having to go at all. Sorry. I forget, you have the consolations of religion.”
“Maybe I'm not all that consoled anymore.”
Bonnie filled her plate with ham and macaroni salad and cherry cobbler. She was suddenly very hungry. She thought that people who brought food when there was a death were onto something.
The dining room window had a view of the side yard. Charlie and the two children were engaged in some game that involved the throwing of stones. Charlie had a thermos of the sort used for coffee, although it was doubtful that it held coffee, and with his free hand he was pitching stones at one of Stan's smaller constructions, a ten-foot-high tower made of hubcaps. Every time his throw connected it made a shimmering, metallic sound. With Charlie's encouragement, the boy and then the girl also heaved their own stones and landed them.
Bonnie said, “I don't suppose Stan would be entirely happy to see that.”
“Let them. The kids need some distractions. It's hard on them, being here. They're scared of Stan, he cries and rages and drinks and slobbers over them, all in about the space of ten minutes. I'm going to enroll them in school here,” Haley added, as if this was an ordinary thing to say.
“Really.”
“We could be around for a while. Stan needs looking after. Him and the kids will get used to each other.”
Bonnie supposed this was at least possible. She said, “What about Scott?”
“He has the whole Fellowship to look after him.”
“What happened?”
“I guess I gradually fell off the belief bus. Oh, not entirely, I mean, I still pretty much go along with God. With Jesus. But all the day-to-day, exalted, pray every time you can't find your shoes? After a while it didn't seem to make any difference, and everybody kept saying it did. Well, everybody in the Fellowship. You're supposed to keep burning with this white-hot intensity, and if you don't, if you're just having an ordinary, so-so day, that's a lapse, and you have to pray about that too. It's this constant hectoring to be filled with the spirit. It's like cheerleading camp. Or the way I imagine cheerleading camp is. It took so much damned
effort
. I started to resent it. And Scott.” She brooded, darkly. “I don't think he's ever had an original thought in his life. He's like a vending machine. Drop a quarter in, Scripture comes out.”
“Does he know you're not coming back? I mean, the kids . . .”
“We didn't talk about it. We don't exactly have a lot of deep conversations. Or much of anything else. Ever wonder why we don't have more kids? Uh huh. He can see Ben and Leah whenever he wants. But they're not going back there.”
Bonnie thought that Haley might have a fight on her hands with that, but she kept her mouth shut. Haley went on, “I want to start over. I was so young and stupid and full of it. I want to finish college. I'm not that old. Thirty. I could take classes at Eau Claire or Menomonie.”
“Sure you could.”
“Like you mean it, please.”
“I absolutely mean it. I think it's great.”
“I know it looks like, Mom died and so I'm going to turn it into some big opportunity for me, but I need this. I need to turn things around. For the kids too. Big changes. People can change.”
“Absolutely,” Bonnie said. Haley was wearing a flowing, hippie-style top in an ethnic print. Her blond hair, the same color as Claudia's before it went gray and was chemically revived, had been cut in bangs straight across her forehead, like a child's. She'd never lost the baby weight and her face was going soft at the jawline.
“Don't worry,” Haley said. “I'm planning on dieting.”
Bonnie shook her head and looked out the window to the hubcap tower. She could no longer see Charlie or the kids. She hoped he hadn't led them into the woods to track bears or something else stupidly dangerous.
“Tell me about you,” Haley said. “Tell me what's going on with you.”
“Oh . . . work, mostly. Same old.”
She'd called Jane to tell her about Claudia. Jane would want to know. The conversation went all right, in a somber sort of way. A mother's death, after all, trumped whatever transgressions had gone on with a husband. It reconnected them, at least for a moment, a sad, sentimental moment, and reminded them of how far they went back. Jane said she would come to the funeral if Bonnie wanted and Bonnie said no, she didn't have to. It was bound to be a bloodbath.
“She was always nice to me. Your mom,” Jane said.
“Yeah, she wasn't always that nice to me.”
“She fussed a lot. It was just her way of caring. Not the easiest way, I know. I'll sure be thinking about you, hang in there,” Jane told her. They hadn't said anything about Eric. Maybe they could keep on not talking about him.
Haley said she'd gone through Claudia's address book and called everybody. “I found a number for your father.”
“My who? BioDad? You're kidding.”
“Rizzi, that's him, right? Like somebody in
The Godfather
?”
“Carl Rizzi. In New Mexico?”
“No, someplace in Ohio. Claudia had three or four addresses for him, old ones she'd scratched out.”
“Huh,” Bonnie said. “Double huh. I had no idea she kept up with the guy.”
“She was sentimental, you know that. She saved all our report cards. Our artwork from grade school.”
“That's different.” Bonnie was still trying to get her mind around the idea of her father as an actual real person, someone her mother might have had some secret contact with over the years. “It's not like she ever talked about him. He was, you know, a closed chapter.” Their father was only invoked when she or Charlie did something wrong or disappointing, and their paternal genetic heritage was said to be at fault, because God knows they did not get that from her. He was a drunk, they were given to understand, a drunk and a loser. Well, Stan was a drunk too, just a successful one. It was something of a pattern.
“They kept in touch? Wow, the mysteries of Claudia.” It was almost as much of a shock as her death. “So what did Pop have to say?”
“I didn't talk to him, I had to leave a message. That's what I did with a lot of people. I had a little speech about how sorry I was to be calling with the news, and when the service was going to be, and the contact for the funeral home. Do you think he'll show up?”
“No clue. I don't think I've seen him since I was four years old.” Bonnie remembered a game they might have played, a loud game that involved chasing. He might have carried her on his shoulders. Fragments, memories of memories. She said, “Maybe it's best not to mention any of this to Stan.”
“Stan's not exactly being a good sport right now,” Haley said. “Just so you know what to expect.”
Stan came in from the studio at dusk. He moved slowly and his eyes were a smeared red. He hugged Bonnie but seemed to forget about her midway through. Haley asked him if he was hungry and he lifted one
hand in a leave me alone gesture. Haley ignored this and brought him a plate of beef with noodles. She put a tray of rolls with butter next to him. “Here, try some of this.”
“Where'd it come from?” Stan glowered at the food. “Who the hell brought it? One of the yoga witches?”
“A perfectly nice lady from Mom's book group. Eat it.”
“She wasn't in any book group.”
“Yes she was. They read a lot of mysteries with female sleuths.”
“Female whats?”
“Detectives,” Bonnie said. “Crime solvers.”
Stan gave her a bleary look that might have been menacing or maybe he was just unable to keep his eyebrows raised. He picked up his fork but before he got it to his plate he was distracted by Benjamin and Leah, who had finished eating and were sitting next to each other, not fidgeting, technically, but poking at each other under the table and lifting up from their chairs with a kind of stealthy delicacy. Of course, it was how they got away with fidgeting in church. “Aren't they supposed to be in school?” Stan asked.
“We don't go to school,” Benjamin said.
“While you're here you go to school,” their mother said. “It doesn't start until next week.”
No one said anything to this. Benjamin asked if they could be excused. Haley told them yes, and to clear their plates. “Do we say blessings while we're here?” Benjamin asked, and Haley said yes, of course. Benjamin and Leah bowed their heads and mumbled something in unison that could not be deciphered. Then they got up and took their plates to the kitchen.
Stan watched them go. “There's something not right about those kids,” he said.
“They're perfectly fine, Dad. You're just not used to children with good manners.”
Stan surveyed the table around him. “What did you do with my drink?”
“You didn't have one. You don't need one. Come on, eat something.”
Stan got up and went to the bar cabinet in the corner of the great room. He came back with a fifth of Jameson's Irish whiskey. He dumped the contents of his water glass into one of the floral arrangements and poured out three fingers. “Want any ice?” Bonnie asked him.
“You're a good girl,” he told her.
“Thank you.”
“Even if you can't find yourself a man.”
“Drat. I forgot to get married.”
Stan took a pull of his drink. “Go ahead, make fun. You're missing out on the most important . . . most, I tell you your mother was the most . . .”
They heard feet ascending the stairs from the basement, where Charlie had been taking a nap.
The refrigerator door opened, closed, and Charlie came into the dining room with a piece of cold fried chicken in one hand.
He and Stan stared at each other. Charlie pointed to the Jameson's. “Can I have some of that?” His mouth was full of fried chicken.
“Get your own. Better yet, get a job so you can afford your own.”
Charlie went back to the refrigerator and returned with a beer. “You can put this on my tab,” he said. He surveyed the food on the table, lifted the top from a baking dish. “Is this Tater Tot casserole? Awesome.”
Haley said, “Get a plate, don't stand there and pick at things.”
“No, that's OK, I'll just eat some scraps off the garage floor.”
“Sit down,” Stan said. “And stop being an asshole.”
Charlie sat. Haley said, “Dad, I really need for you to watch your language while the kids are here.”
Stan made a show of looking around the room and beneath the table. “Kids? I don't see any kids.”
“You know what I mean.”
Charlie said. “I believe that what we have going on here is an assholery contest. Who has the biggest, hairiestâ”
“You both win,” Bonnie said. “You both get a prize. Now please. Mom would be really unhappy to hear this.”
That shut them up at least until Stan finally ate some food and went off to bed, and Charlie took a six-pack with him to go watch television. Bonnie and Haley put the food away and cleaned the kitchen. Haley said, “Mom wanted to be cremated. Did you know?”
“I think I do too. As soon as possible.”
“They're both lost without her and they don't know what to do except have tantrums.”
“I don't want to keep refereeing them, it's exhausting.”
“They just have to get through the service. Then they never have to see each other again.”
They worked in silence for a time, then Bonnie said, “About the cremation. It's not like I enjoy thinking about these things, but when do they . . .”
“After the service. We'll get to see her, then they take her away. We'll get the, I think they call them cremains, later. I know. I don't like thinking about it either. We have to pick out clothes for her, Stan's no help. Something pretty. You know she'd want to look pretty.”