Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
I will miss her more
than fireflies miss summer,
more than the drum
misses the drummer,
more than the wave
misses the shore,
more than the songs
miss the troubadour.
She's been my hip hip
and
my hooray.
I will miss her
more than a poem can say.
For seventeen years
there have been three of usâ
enough to fill a whole row.
Now,
there's an empty seat
between my husband and me.
A Grand Canyon
between my husband
and me.
For the rest of our lives
it'll just be
the two of us.
Just we two.
Just
us.
Michael and I
trudge up the front walk,
lugging our suitcases
and our dread behind us.
The darkened windows of our house
watch us with gloomy eyes.
Even the roses
look glum.
I turn the key in the lock
and shove open the door,
bracing
for the ringing silence.
But insteadâ
I hear Alice's voice
wafting in from the speaker
on our answering machine.
“â¦he was so stupefyingly boring that I fell
asleep in my soup and nearly drowned!
And then he wanted to have sex with me,
can you
imagine?
â¦Anyhow, I want to hear all about
what it's like in that empty nest of yours.
But you guys are probably
doing it on the kitchen table right now,
so I'll let you goâ¦
Call me when you're done!”
Michael and I
would be laughing right now
if we weren't
so unspeakably bleak.
Root rot
got her.
But I can't bring myself
to ask Michael to cut her down.
She stands
outside my office window,
the breeze sighing
in her skeletal branches,
her feathery leaves
long gone.
She's dead, but her brittle arms
still yearn toward the sun,
latticeworking the yard
with a sad spindly shade.
Michael's been spending hours
sitting out in the yard, sketching her.
How can I ask him to chop her down
and cram her bones into plastic bags?
How can I ask him
to grind her stump?
How can I ask him
to remove every trace
of she who once held
my daughter in her lap?
I walk down the hall
and pass by her room,
then take a step back
and open the door.
Omigod!
What's happened here?
Where's all the stuff
that should be on the floor?
Gone the scattered books and papers.
Gone the heaps of dirty clothes.
Gone the mounds of soggy towelsâ
who would have thought I'd ever miss those?
All those years
I spent complaining,
nagging her
to clean it allâ¦
Why do I suddenly
yearn for the chaos
that used to drive me
up the wall?
I reach for a bag of Ruffles.
Then stop myself.
Now that Samantha's gone,
who will eat them?
I trudge from aisle to aisle
not
putting things into my cartâ
no Hershey's Syrup, no extra-crunchy Skippy,
no Honey Bunches of Oats.
I round a corner
and nearly collide with Jane.
She's taking a break from shopping
to tickle Madison,
whose plump feet
dangle like happy bells
from the seat at the front
of her overstuffed cart.
“Oh!” I say. “Hello, you two.”
“Hi, Howwy!” Madison cries, in that adorable
I-can't-pronounce-my-Ls way of hers.
Jane greets me with a radiant smile.
I glance down at her belly
and suddenly realize she's pregnant.
Very
pregnant.
How could I not have noticed this before�
I look down into my own cartâ
my crater, my chasm.
Nothing in it
but one lonely onion,
the only onion
that was ever able
to make me cry
before
I cut into it.
I spent half the morning
reading every word
of Samantha's college newspaper online,
and the other half bouncing around
her school's website, reading
the “Advice for Freshman Parents” pages,
and compulsively Googling
the weather back east in a bizarre attempt
to feel connected to my child.
Now it's three o'clock in the afternoon
and I'm still wearing
my ratty old nightgown.
I haven't brushed my teeth or showered
or combed what's left of my hair
or eaten my breakfast or my lunch.
Or written
one single
word.
I'm as hollow as an empty womb,
as flattened as a mammogrammed breast,
as dark as a house that's blown every fuse.
I've got a mean case
of the post-daughter-um
depart-um blues.
I suck in a breath.
Could it be Samantha?
My fingers itch to answer it.
But what if it's Roxie calling
to ask me to give her back
my advance money?
Or maybe it's my mother calling
to spew her roid rage at me
like pepper sprayâ¦
Or Dr. Hack calling
to chuckle in my ear
and tell me more bad newsâ¦
So I let Michael answer it.
And when he tells me it's Samantha,
I dash down the hall to pick up the extension.
Then both of us listen breathlessly as she
tells us about the midnight walk by the river
that she took with her new friends.
She tells us
they sat together on the bridge
and couldn't believe how beautiful it wasâ
how the full moon
winked at them
like the moon in an old cartoon.
She tells us
they all felt so jolly
that they started singing Christmas songsâ¦
Christmas songs in Septemberâ¦
in the moonlightâ¦
by the riverâ¦
Something like relief floods through meâ
something like relief mixed with joy
mixed with heartache.
Michael leaves the room,
and a few minutes later
he strolls back in
whistling “We Wish You a Merry Christmas,”
holding a leafy little branch
over his head.
“What's that?” I ask.
“Mistletoeâ¦?” he says.
I cross the room
and kiss him on the cheek.
Then I rest my forehead against his
and heave a sigh.
Wouldn't you just know it?
Now that we have the house all to ourselves,
I'm too miserable
to take advantage of it.
I can't seem to step out my front door
without running smack into
another one of them,
as though all of us
are cruising around
in bereaved bumper cars.
Wendy's mother,
wandering through the mall,
looking oddly lost.
Laura's mother,
lurking in the stacks
at the library,
sneaking stricken glances
at the mothers
reading to their toddlers.
Brandy,
sitting alone at Ben & Jerry's,
staring down into her untouched banana split.
Each time I encounter another one of these
kindred crumpled spirits,
I force a smile and stop to chat,
thinking to myself,
“If her
eyes don't tear up,
then
mine
won't.”
But,
of course,
hers
do
tear up.
And we fall into each others' arms,
like a couple of old rag dolls
who've long since lost their stuffing.
So I'm getting ready for our “date.”
But even though I wash it,
twice,
with shampoo that's especially formulated
with essential fatty acids
derived from natural botanic oils
to replace valuable lipids
and restore the emollients necessary
for the hair to become thicker
and more supple
with a healthy lustrous shine,
and even though I remove
the excess moisture from my hair
and evenly distribute a small amount
of instant reconstructor and detangler
to enhance strength and manageability,
and even though
I work it through to the ends,
leaving it on for three minutes
and then rinse thoroughly before adding
the revolutionary polymerized
electrolytic moisture potion
that actually repairs split ends
while providing flexible styling control
by infusing the roots with twenty-three
essential provitamins,
and even though I massage it in
to make my hair feel instantly fuller,
with added shaping power,
and then rinse again
with lukewarm water,
towel dry and apply the desired amount
of styling gel to the palm of my hand,
and then comb it through
and blow it dry,
it still looks pathetic.
Dining together
at a table for two.
Just me.
Just you.
All around us,
young husbands and wives
appear to be having
the time of their lives.
But you've
heard
all my stories.
And I've heard all yours.
So we sit here in silenceâ
a couple of bores.
Wendy's mom calls to tell me
that Laura's parents are getting a divorce.
Apparently, neither one of them
caught the other one cheating,
but the day after Laura left for college
they realized that the only thing
they'd had in common
all these years
was
Laura.
I hang up the phone,
and notice
that I'm finding it strangely hard
to breathe.
How does a wife
reach the point
when she knows
that she wants a divorce?
Does she simply drift
from being happily married
to being a little
less happily married
to waking up one day
feeling as if her marriage
is a pillow pressing down
over her face?
God. I don't know
what's the matter with me.
I feel so dizzy
all of a sudden.
But,
on the way there,
I trip over Michael's slippersâ
the ones I'm
always
tripping over
because he forgets to put them in the closet
where they belong.
My big toe crashes into the nightstand.
AndâJesus!
I'm bleeding!
I limp
to the bathroom
to search for the Neosporin.
And I'm
still
searching for it
a few minutes later,
when Michael walks in, whistling.
“Hey,” he says, “you're bleeding!”
“Brilliant observation,” I grumble.
“What's
your
problem?” he asks.
“You're
my problem,” I growl.
“Why don't you
ever
put anything back
where it goes after you use it?”
“I do,” he says, crossing his arms over his chest.
I go back to rifling through the cabinet,
and manage to locate a box of Band-Aids.
But,
naturally,
it's empty.
I gnash my teeth.
“When you use the last Band-Aid,” I hiss,
“you're supposed to throw out the box.”
“I do,” he says again, clearing his throat.
“No. You don't,” I snap. “Which is why
I didn't know we'd run out of them.”
“Maybe
you
used the last Band-Aid,” he says.
“I did not use the last Band-Aid!” I shout.
“Well, neither did I!” he shouts back.
Michael stomps out of the bathroom,
muttering under his breath.
I slam the door shut behind him.
Then I wash off my toe,
wrap a tissue around it,
crawl into bed,
and pull
the covers up
over my head.