September
MOTHERHOOD IS HARD. Harder than I ever imagined anything could be. Itโs harder than studying for my SATs. My LSAT. More challenging than that paper I had to write for the Womenโs Studies course in my freshman year that came back to me looking like two red pens had engaged in a murder/suicide all over my typewritten words. More tiring than working two jobs and taking a full load of classes for four years.
My respect for Nana is through the roof. If I had to raise one kid after the other, Iโd be a little cranky too. But with her help and Tuckerโs, Iโve fallen into a routine that seems to work, and by the time the second week of classes launches, Iโm convinced Iโve got this. After all, Iโm only in class three hoursโat the mostโa day. And Iโm not working two jobs.
This is easy. Easy.
Until I stumble out of my last class Friday of that second week, laden with my bottles, tubes, five pounds of books, and my computer with a class assignment of more than a thousand pages of reading for the weekend. They keep piling up. When Professor Malcolm announced weโd need to read the entire chapter on culpability and intent, I waited for someoneโanyoneโto object. But no one did.
After class, none of my peers appear to be affected by the fact that weโre pretty much required to read what seems like an entire semesterโs worth of coursework in two days. Instead, three kids in my row decide to conduct an intense discussion about Harvardโs grading system, which they already shouldโve known about before they even enrolled.
I wait impatiently for them to wrap up the conversation so we can all get the hell out of the classroom. I need to start reading, but more
importantly, my breasts feel like theyโre about to burst. I havenโt fed Jamie for nearly three hours and if I donโt get to the libraryโs lactation room, Iโm going to end up leaking all over my damn shirt.
โI donโt like this no letter grades thing. Honors, Pass, Low Pass, and Fail?โ grouses the sharp-nosed blond boy next to me.
โI heard that LPs are really discouraged. Itโs either Honors or Pass. You really have to fuck up to get a Fail,โ says the girl beside him. Her cheekbones are so fierce they could cut through my entire textbook.
I make a big show of gathering up all my shit and stuffing it into my messenger bag, but no oneโs moving. Instead, another girl, wearing a peasant skirt that triggers bad memories of Hippie Stacy, chimes in.
โMy cousin graduated from here a year ago and said that BigLaw calculates their own grades based on your H, Ps, and LPs, so it works all the same. H is an A, and so forth.โ
โMy big complaint is that only one person gets to be summa cum laude. At any other law school, if you get the grades, you get the designation. Having only one is shitty,โ Cheekbones declares.
Peasant Skirt reassures her. โYou can get the DS, though.โ โStill, only a couple people get the Deanโs Scholar too.โ
โTheyโre so stingy with their honors,โ the guy adds. I clear my throat. They continue to ignore me.
โBut itโs Harvard, so the bigs are going to look at you anyway,โ Cheekbones says with the nonchalance of someone whoโs secure in her postgraduate prospects. โHow soon can you start bidding in EIP?โ
โEarly interview program?โ Peasant Girl smirks. โSettle down, gunner.
Second year only. Learn how to write a memo first.โ
She shares a look of derision with the boy as Cheekbones flushes slightly. Itโs no fun to be the butt of jokes, which spurs me to unwisely jump in.
โIโm not so worried about the grades as I am the amount of reading weโre going to have to do. Iโd like to get a head start on it this afternoon.โ Hint. Hint. Move the hell along, people.
Cheekbones lifts her chin, happy to be the insulter instead of the insulted. โThat isnโt hard. Hard is picking the right Law Review article topic. Reading and digesting a few cases is a cakewalk.โ
She turns with a contemptuous swish of hair, gathers her books and leaves me open-mouthed behind her. The two other students follow. The guy whispers to Peasant Skirt, โHey, I heard thereโs an application-only study group. Iโm interested. How do I get in?โ
She sniffs. โIf you have to ask, you donโt belong.โ Lovely. At least weโre moving.
My boobs ache as if my body is getting ready to let all the milk out. Hurrying, I move toward the door, brushing by two classmates who have stopped to chat with another student. Donโt these kids have anything better to do than stand around and shoot the shit?
Outside, a student is handing out brochures. I grab one and stop in my tracks. Itโs an invitation to attend an informational course on how to get on Law Review. The meeting is in fifteen minutes. My chest throbs.
โYour shirtโs sprung a leak,โ an amused male voice says.
I drop my chin to see what heโs talking about and blanch at the sight of two damp spots right around my nipple areas.
โI donโt know whatโs going on, but maybe you should see a doctor for that infection. Thatโs nasty.โ
I recognize him instantly. Kale something or other, the asshole from the legal clinic. His hair is Ken-doll neat, plastered to the side of his face. Everything about him screams expensive and privileged. He nudges the guy next to him, who looks utterly grossed out.
I slap the brochure against his chest. โIโm breastfeeding, you douche.โ
I swear I hear a mooing sound behind me, but when I turn around, both guys are walking away.
It takes me fifteen minutes to walk across campus. With each step, I drip more. My emotions are a cross between embarrassment, anger and frustration. Embarrassment that Iโm leaking all over. Anger that I even care what that fuckface thinks. And frustration that all my precious breast milk is filling my bra cups and staining my shirt. Crossing my arms over my chest doesnโt do any good. The pressure makes the milk come out faster.
By the time I get to the library, Iโm a fucking mess. The reference clerk who holds the keys to the lactation room gingerly hands it over, careful not to make any contact with my flesh.
A woman is just leaving as I arrive. โAll yours,โ she says cheerfully. โThanks,โ is my dour response.
She catches the door as I start inside. โBad day, huh?โ
Her voice is so kind and understanding, I nearly break down. โYou have no idea,โ I answer, but then realize she, of all people, probably does have an idea. โOr maybe you do. But yeah, itโs been a shit day.โ
โHold on a sec.โ She digs around in her bag. โHere.โ She hands me a small plastic package. โI actually have a second set and Iโve never used them.โ
โWhatโs this?โ I turn the package over, examining the petal-shaped silicon pads.
โYou stick them on your nipples and they stop the leaking.โ โSeriously?โ I gape at her.
โYep. Theyโre not perfect, and if you wait too long, the milk will eventually wear the adhesion off, but they do work.โ
I clench the package tight in my fist, filled with overwhelming relief. I have to fight off the tears again. โI would hug you right now if I wasnโt all gross. But thank you so much.โ I spot a distinctive red textbook with black and gold lettering on the spine sticking out of her bag. โ1L?โ I ask.
โThird year, actually. I was hoping to wait until I was done with school before this all happened.โ She waves her hand at the insulated lunch bag sheโs carrying. Her milk must be in there. โHow about you?โ
โ1L.โ
She grimaces. โGood luck, honey. Just remember, every year gets easier after the first one. And the first one is really just a war of attrition.โ She pats me on the back. โYouโll be fine.โ
I slip inside and attach myself to the medical grade pump. Itโs a trek to get to Widener Library from the law school, but the pump engine is here, which means I only need to carry my bottles, horns and tubes, and I didnโt have to spring for the cost of an expensive portable pumping machine. My checking account is already weeping from the ravaging that my textbooks did to it.
I undo my silk button-down and pull off my bra. I should be grossed out, but Iโm too damn tired. Iโm mostly vaguely irritated given that it takes twenty minutes for the stupid machine to pull out two ounces of food from my boobs that Jamie doesnโt even want to eat.
Rocking in the chair, I pull out my phone to read my texts. Hope and Carin messaged me, but I skip those and tap on Tuckerโs name.
Tucker:ย Went over to see J over lunch.
Underneath the message is a picture of Jamie sleeping in the crook of his arm. My heart squeezes, and the place between my legsโwhich I figured was dead from laborโpulses wildly. Thereโs nothing sexier than a loving dad.
Tucker makes all my hormones do a giddy dance.
Me:ย Sheโs such an angel.
Tucker:ย I hate leaving her.
Me:ย I leaked breast milk all over my shirt. It was horribly embarrassing.
Tucker:ย Awww. Poor baby. Iโll come over later and rub ur back.
Me:ย I have 1000 pages to read and thatโs not even an exaggeration.
Tucker:ย Iโll take care of J. U study.
Me:ย Iโll take u up on that.
Tucker:ย Good. U never let me do enough. Because I donโt want to drive you away.
Of course, I donโt type that.
Me:ย Youโre the best dad J could ever ask for.ย Tucker:ย U have low standards, babe, but I like it.ย Me:ย ๐
Me:ย Iโm going to take a nap now while all my life blood is sucked out of me. I look like Iโm part of the Matrix, plugged into a machine.
Tucker:ย Did u take the red pill or the blue one?
Me:ย Which one makes Jamie go to sleep? Thatโs the one Iโll take.
Tucker:ย Iโll go buy an rx of Ambien.
Me:ย Too bad Iโm not allowed to take that.
Tucker:ย My mom said her mom used to rub brandy on her gums to get her to go to sleep.
Me:ย Hopefully DHS isnโt spying on these messages. Did it work?ย Tucker:ย I dunno. Iโll leave a bottle of brandy next to the Ambien.ย Me:ย See. Best dad ever.
Tucker:ย LOL. Go to sleep, darlin.
*
HOPE ANDย CARINย bought me a book called โGo the Fuck to Sleep.โ Iโve read it to Jamie a hundred times. It doesnโt work. That thing is trash. Over the weekend Jamie decides sheโs allergic to sleep. The only time she even closes her eyes is when Iโm moving.
While I can read and walk at the same time, simultaneous sleeping and walking is beyond my abilities, which is why I start my third week of law school eight hundred pages behind. I drag myself into class, having not read even one word for my contracts class. I made it through criminal law, but that was it.
Hopefully Professor Clive will call on anyone but me today.
โLast week, we went over the first two elements forming a contract. Mr. Bagliano, please share with the class those two elements and the holding of the 1898ย Carlillย case.โ
Mr. Bagliano, who looks as Italian as his last name sounds, obediently recites the two principles we learned earlier. โOffer and acceptance. The 1898ย Carlillย case discussed whether an advertisement could be construed as an offer. The case was decided by the English Court of Appeals, who held that yes, it was a binding unilateral offer that could be accepted by anyone responding to the advert.โ
โExcellent, Mr. Bagliano.โ Professor Clive consults his sheet of paper that I presume has all of our names.
I close my eyes and pray that my name magically disappears.
โMs. James, tell us the third element of a contract and the holding of the
Bordenย case.โ
As my heart plummets to my stomach, I desperately scan the room as if somehow I can read the answer in the eyes of one of my classmates. No light bulb appears over anyoneโs head, least of all mine.
Beside me, a guy whose name I havenโt made the effort to learn mutters something out of the side of his mouth. It sounds likeย confederation. That doesnโt seem right. He coughs โconfederationโ again into his hand. Nervous laughter spreads across the room while my cheeks light up like twin flames. Down in the front of the lecture bowl, Professor Cliveโs lips thin. โMr.
Gavriel is sayingย consideration, Ms. James.โ He shifts his gaze to the poor guy next to me. โMr. Gavriel, since you know the answer, perhaps you can share the holding of the case?โ
Mr. Gavriel shoots me a sympathetic look before whipping out his perfectly constructed notes and proceeding to discuss mutuality and illusory promises and other shit that I donโt have the first clue about.
I casually draw a notebook over my own chicken scratching where the ink is smeared and bleeding through the page from where I drooled on it when I fell asleep, along with a healthy dose of breast milk and baby spit.
Itโs hard to hear the last of the lecture with embarrassment roaring in my eardrums, but I take copious notes in the hopes that when I review this crap later, it will all make sense.
After class is over, Professor Clive gestures for me to join him in the front of the room.
He steeples his fingers below his chin. โMs. James, Professor Fromm shared with me your home circumstance, and while I can appreciate how difficult that must be, the standards in class are not modified due to motherhood.โ
Stiffly, I reply, โI didnโt think that they would be. I apologize about today and promise that there wonโt be any lapses in the future.โ
โI certainly hope not, but then again, we grade on a curve and someone has to be on the bottom.โ
I raise my hand to scratch my neck, not because I itch, but because of the overwhelming urge to flick him off.
โIt wonโt be me,โ I assure him.
He peers at me for a long, uncomfortable moment before dismissing me with a slight nod. โWeโll see.โ