The House (16 page)

Read The House Online

Authors: Anjuelle Floyd

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #African American, #Self-Help, #Death & Grief, #Grief & Bereavement, #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Women's Fiction

BOOK: The House
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Anna was driving him home one day after visiting Elena at Berkeley General when Reverend Elijah said, “She’s asking about you. Why won’t you come to see her?”

“You need your time with her,” Anna said. She slowed the car to a halt at the intersection of Telegraph and Alcatraz Avenues.

“I’ve had my time. She wants to see you,” Elijah said. The light turned green and she turned onto Alcatraz Avenue. The Reverend placed his hands upon his daughter’s full and pregnant abdomen. He said, “I hope this one is a girl.”

“I don’t.”

Her father tilted his head to the side then turned toward the passenger window. “I wanted more children. Your mother didn’t.”

“Why?” Anna’s fear and dislike of her mother drove her to uncover what made Elena tick.

“She said she had only enough love for one child,” Reverend Elijah explained. “That you were a girl made it all the more difficult.”

Knowing that Elena had wished for Anna to be a boy made Anna all the more determined not to see her mother. She would not be a portal for Elena’s anger, and malcontent to enter the baby she carried inside. Anna sought to protect her child. She did not know she was carrying a girl.

Upon reaching home, she switched off the ignition. Her father opened the door and was about to get out when Anna asked, “Why did you marry Mama?”

“It’s what we did back then.” Anna’s father spoke a truth evidenced by the creases deepening into his dark, brown face upon a body that no longer stood straight and tall. “It’s all we knew, what was expected of us, to marry and have a family.”

“Did she ever seem to love you?” Anna had always been certain of her father’s love for her mother. “Was she different back then?”

“She was more honest,” Reverend Elijah said. “Your mother was very clear. She hated life with her parents. They had been Louisiana sharecroppers who owned less than the beans they picked.

She said she couldn’t go back home, that if she did, she would die either by God’s will, or her own hand.” Anna’s father began to cry. Holding back her own tears, Anna reached across the seat, and enveloped him.

I can’t go back home. I won’t.
Anna had spoken similar words to Edward on the day she graduated college. She married him the next day. Those same words crisscrossed Anna’s mind as she writhed in the throes of delivering Linda. Edward had been in the Mediterranean overseeing the sale of some resort condos on the coast of Cyprus when she entered labor. Anna called their neighbors, Doris and Charles Martin. Doris drove Anna to the hospital while Charles remained at the Martin home with David and Theo, then ages four and two and a half, playing with the Martin’s son, Adrian.

Charles had helped Anna into the car before taking the boys back to their home. Rattled and knocked by the spasms of contractions rippling through her during the drive, she had contemplated the warmth and support of Charles’ hand to her back. She had wondered what woman Edward might have been with.

The memory of Charles’ hand brought comfort to the pain and ache of Anna’s loneliness when hours later she fought to give birth to Linda, her third child. She concluded it similar to what Edward provided the women with whom he slept. Following the delivery, and with Linda’s tiny infant lips sucking from her breast Anna again considered the warmth of Charles’ palm and what the women in Edward’s life, and whom she had never met, provided him. Anna’s mother, Elena, lay three floors above ebbing toward death.

The madness rooted in Elena eventually blossomed in Anna as a well hidden, but no less powerful, obsession with Edward’s unfaithfulness. Anna’s ruminations on the women with whom he transgressed his marriage vows both consumed and fueled her instincts toward mothering. The commitment to giving her children what she never received from Elena grew stronger. Anna’s determination toward loving her children without condition became a vicious cycle propagated by Anna’s attempt to shield herself from the hurt of Edward’s absences. The more she gave, the less of her self remained in the marriage. Edward would not notice should he ever discover his way back home.

Anna’s children had survived Edward’s long absences to which she offered no excuses or explanations beyond, “Your father is working.” While her statements held substance and carried weight against David and Theo’s minds fast approaching adulthood, Linda had thought otherwise. She was suspicious of their father’s pro longed time away.

When Linda was fifteen, Edward brought his new protégé home to dinner. Gabrielle was her name. Thirty-years-old, she sat at the other end of the table adjacent to Edward. Hurting and angry, Linda was upset about having to sit next to the woman she considered an enemy. Anna had prepared a special meal, despite her suspicions of why Edward was bringing Gabrielle into their house.

The entire family sat around the dinner table eating when nineteen-year-old David, a college freshman, reported with serious demeanor and controlled pride, “I aced my calculus test.” As a philosophy major, math had not been his strong suit. With his sights on entering law school, he had been worried about the test.

“Wonderful. I knew you would do it.” Anna had patted his shoulder then asked him to pass the bread.

“Thanks, but I had to prove it to myself.” David handed her the basket.

Like his father
, Anna thought as she buttered her roll then eyed Edward cutting into his trout. “If I can keep this up, I’ll be finished with an A, or at least a B,” David said.

“You will.” Again Anna touched his shoulder. “Please pass the potatoes.” She didn’t worry about her weight at that time.

Theo blurted, “Charles and Doris, I mean Mr. and Mrs. Martin, are getting a divorce.” Their son, Adrian, attended high school and played on the local soccer team with Theo.

“Who told you?” Anna asked. Serine, then twelve, and at the other end of the table quietly observing Edward rapt in conversation with the vibrant Gabrielle. No one except Anna appeared to have heard any of what Theo was saying. “She’s been upset about something.” Anna didn’t mention that in the past month she had given six of her own Valium to Doris.

Sandwiched uncomfortably between David and Gabrielle, Linda picked at her food.

“Are you alright?” Anna asked. Linda placed her fork on the side of her plate and drank some water.

“Adrian says he’s going to live with his mom,” Theo continued. “His Dad says that’s better since he doesn’t have time to take him to school and soccer practices.”

“Well he’s only got this year, really three months, before he’s on his own,” David offered. “When school’s out in May, he can get a job and save up money. Then he won’t have to bug them and he can stay out of contact while they’re hashing out everything. After his freshman year in college, he can get a job on campus and never have to come home again.”

“It’s not that simple, Mr. Philosopher,” Theo bit back. “College costs money.” Even at seventeen, Anna’s younger son showed signs of the deep but practical thinker.

“Unless Adrian wants to spend the rest of life stuck between his parents bickering, he’d better toughen up,” David said. “He’s on his own now.”

Serine remained mesmerized by the circus at the table. Linda, across the table, continued picking at her food. Theo and David continued their discussion of the Martin’s divorce. Edward shot a glance at Anna, and returned to conversation with Gabrielle. Ed ward and Gabrielle were quite animated in discussing plans for Gabrielle’s place at Manning Real Estate. Anna hadn’t felt the kind of excitement that she imagined was flowing between Edward and Gabrielle in a long time. Gabrielle was his protégé and new interest. Gabrielle lived in America. There would be no leaving her Anna suspected; no sadness or depression after he departed and began a new round of selling foreign properties. Slowly, she began to ponder and imagine that the beautiful, lithe Gabrielle was perhaps the woman for whom Edward would leave her when the right time came. A divorce would destroy the children should Anna request or Ed ward demand one. Anna grew fearful that Edward would announce plans for a change both in his business and his marriage that night.

Again, Anna met Linda’s gripping gaze. Hurt and betrayal flowed through, emotions that were and should have been Anna’s, but that she could not accept and allow to surface. She remained calm as Linda’s frustration bubbled.

Theo admonished David. “The key to Adrian surviving the breakup of his parents is more than gaining entrance to a good college. Life as he knows it is gone. It’s dead.”

Anna’s heart sank upon hearing those words. She glanced at Edward deeper in the throes of discussion with the beautiful Gabrielle and Serine, who could have passed for Edward and Gabrielle’s daughter. Serine watched, ever more mesmerized by the two.

Theo said of Adrian, “He’s worried. And scared.”

“He told you that?” David asked.

“No.”

“Then who?” Though he would eventually settle for aspects of the law that required little or no time in the courtroom, David was already displaying lawyerly tactics of demanding answers.

“The counselor at our school,” Theo said. Even then, he had the ability to see between the carefully structured lines of life. Serine remained fascinated and glued to watching her brothers battle within the discussion. Only Linda seemed to realize that the argument was not simply about the Martin’s divorce.

Anna, fearing and realizing that Theo knew something she didn’t want any of her children to know, whispered to her younger son, “You went to see a counselor?”

“We all need counseling,” Linda said with her eyes fixed upon her plate full of food uneaten and growing cold.

David turned to her. “What did you say?”

“We all need someone to talk to. Everyone in this family,” Linda said.

“About what?” David asked as if he had destroyed all memories of Linda’s problems. He had been away at Stanford in Palo Alto when she had taken an overdose of pills the last time. Dread moved through Anna like a tidal wave overtaking an island.

Linda said, “We’re like the Martins.” She lifted her head and added, “Mom and Dad are just like Mr. and Mrs. Martin. Dad doesn’t love Mama and she—”

“What did you say?” Edward stopped talking to Gabrielle.

“You don’t love Mama,” the words fell from Linda’s lips like water from a jagged cliff.

“Don’t embarrass your mother like that, or me.”

“You embarrass yourself and Mama, by bringing
her
in here.” Linda pointed to Gabrielle.

“Close your mouth.” Edward hit the table.

“It’s true.” Linda lowered her head. “You don’t love Mama. And you don’t love us. That’s why you stay gone all the time. You only love the women that you’re with.” Linda pushed back her chair, wobbled to her feet, and left the table. Her unsteady gait revealed that she had taken one of Anna’s Valium again.

 

Naked we come into this world. And naked we shall leave.

Seven days after Linda entered the world, Anna stood at her mother’s grave site
.
As pallbearers had lowered her casket into the ground, Elijah Chason recited scripture amid the hundred or more mourners in attendance of Elena’s burial.

The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul... Yay, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil. The Lord is with me
... Anna recited those words, and others under her breath half a decade later and while observing Edward assist other pallbearers in lowering Elijah’s casket into a rectangular space cut into the ground beside Elena.

Where can I go from your spirit? Or where can I flee your presence. If I ascend to heaven, You are there; If I make my bed in Sheol, behold, You are there ... If I dwell in the remotest part of the sea ... Your hand will guide me ... Surely the darkness will overwhelm me, And the light around me will be night ...
Anna had spoken little to her father in the years following her mother’s death. It was not due to distance. He lived across town in North Oakland near the church he had ministered for three decades. Elena’s death had hewn a large hole in Elijah Chason’s life. Anna had tried filling it with dinners she prepared and daily phone calls that waned to every other day, and then once a week. Soon, he re fused to eat the meals, and Anna eventually saw that it was best to leave her father to his loneliness and let him suffer in silence. She finally settled on calling him each Sunday after she he returned from mass. Having delivered his sermon at Roadside Baptist Church, two blocks down from Union Street, he would have arrived home.

The time eventually came when Reverend Elijah no longer gave sermons. Anna’s patience never strained. She continued to call, Elijah sometimes not answering. Anna took to leaving letters in his mailbox. Answering machines, voice and e-mail had yet to arrive. Though Anna seldom ventured to her childhood home on Union Street, her will to connect with her father while staying outside the net of his misery remained strong until his death.

Naked we come into this world. Naked we shall leave.
Anna now lay in bed wondering what she would utter to herself, hold as comfort, and offer as prayer when others would lower Edward’s casket into the earth.?

 

Chapter 21

Anna awoke the morning after Grant’s and Matt’s departures feeling vague and tentative about her ability to adapt to Edward’s dying. Like her eldest and youngest, David and Serine, Anna would have to stretch beyond her means, exit the known and enter a zone of discomfort, a place she had successfully avoided. She had married Edward in order to escape the misery of her mother, Elena, and her inability to hold intimate relationship with her family. Anna married Edward prepared to love and grow close with him. Now that he was dying, she mourned, not simply the closing of his life, but the death of hope and the loss of what could or might have been.

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