A
fter hours of unloading, unpacking, and shuffling furniture around my bedroom, we decided to call it a day. Sarah and Caleb took off
after I had pizza delivered, leaving me with an entire box to myself in an eerily quiet house.
It took me a few tries, but eventually, I got the record player going. Now Frank Sinatra is singing about riding high in April as I load my sheets into the dryer, singing along loud enough that the house no longer feels so sparse. With no neighbours sharing a wall to worry about, I belt out the lyrics with flair. Laughing toward the ceiling when dear old Frank refers to himself as having once been a pirate. Becauseย thatย is exactly what landed me here.
And, dammit, Iโm going to pick myself back up and get back in the race too. Just as Mr. Sinatra suggests.
I glide around the house, smoothly waltzing with a hand on the top of my wannabe baby bump and stopping along the way forย manyย ice chip breaks.
When my sheets finish in the dryer just as the last track on the B-side fades out, I make my bed and crawl into it.
Pulling out my phone, I immediately check my texts from Bo. He asks how Iโm settling in, provides instructions for the faucet in the showerโ which was apparently installed backward and can be temperamentalโand lets me know heโll be back tomorrow before lunch. I quickly respond before pulling up my texts with my mom. I type out a few apologies before I decide to just call her instead.
It rings only once before she picks up.
โShe lives,โ my mother declares as a form of greeting.
โHey, Mom. Sorry. Things have been really busy lately. Iโve missed you.โ
โSarah said that too. She didnโt say much else, though. Keeping your secrets, as always. I assume thatโs why youโre calling? She didnโt want to play middleman?โ
โNo! Well, yes, she did tell me you called. But things really have been busy. And yesโthereย isย something I need to tell you.โ I look up to the ceiling, willing the words to come. Or, alternatively, willing the well-timed beginning of an alien invasion or apocalyptic event. โIโm pregnant,โ I say.
Two words. Thatโs it. Simple. Out there now. No taking it back. The line goes quiet. Painfully quiet.
โMom?โ
โIโm here.โ
โDidโdid you hear me?โ
โHear what? Sorry, my show is on.โ
โLa Reina del Sur? Mom, itโs on Netflixโjust pause it.โ Some traditions, like Sunday night telenovelas, never die. Thatโs probably what Sarah is
doing in bed right now too. That was always their thing, and sometimes Marcie and I were invited to join. Only if we didnโt ask too many questions like: Wasnโt he dead? Who is that? When did she have time for an affair between the murdering sprees? Isnโt that herย stepfather?
She grumbles, her chair squeaking as she reaches for the remote. โFine, fine, fine. Just, you caught me during a juicy bit. Teresa just calledโโ
โIโm pregnant,โ I interrupt.
โYou?โ she says abruptly, accompanied by a stunned laugh.
I donโt know why her surprise offends me, but it does. โYes,ย me.โ
She makes a sound like sputtering. Itโs half amusement, partial shock. โWellโฆ whoโs the guy?โ
Of course. Noย how are you feeling?ย Orย how far along?ย Orโokay, I suppose the next question might beย whoโs the guy, but the first two matter more. โHis name is Bo. Heโs a friend of mine. We got caught up at a party, andโฆ you know the rest.โ Not aย completeย fabrication. My mom doesnโt need to know I fucked the guy the same day I met him. Some things donโt need to be shared with the woman who began preaching abstinence-above- all to me when I was ten.
โBirth control zero; McNulty women two,โ I joke flatly. โAnd? Is he aย loserย or a decent man?โ
I look around the nice bedroom inย hisย house while sitting on myย newย bed that he provided and nod to myself. โA decent man. Weโve, uh, weโve actually moved in together.โ
I hear a whimper down the phone. A happy sort of relief mixed with a contented sigh. โOh, thatโs wonderful, Winnie. Truly, truly wonderful.โ
I probably should have mentioned the context in which we are moving in together, but why bother now? Iโm not going to set myself up for a more
difficult conversation if I donโt have to. โIโm sorry I didnโt call earlier; itโs been a whirlwind. Iโve been really sick, andโโ
โWhatโs he like?โ
โYikes,โ I respond before I can help it. โWhat?โ she snips back.
โMom,โ I try to sound less agitated than I feel. โI was just telling you Iโve been throwing my guts up every day, and you interrupt to ask me about him. Bo is fine. Heโs great. Butย your daughterย could use some maternal advice.โ
โSorry, youโre right. I was so sick with you too, chickie. Itโs awful, but someday soon, itโll all be worth it.โ
โAny tips?โ
โThe only thing that worked for me was consuming my weight in root beer and salted pretzels daily. Doctors would probably warn you against that method these days.โ
โThink thatโs how I got my hand?โ โWinnifred June!โ
I giggle into the phone. My mom does too, but sheโs fighting it as she always attempts to.
โIโm due July twenty-fourth,โ I tell her once our giggles soften.
โOh, wow. Soโฆ youโre aย fewย months along.โ Thereโs an unmistakable twinge of hurt in her voice that I obviously put there. I hate that sheโs upset, but I also canโt say I wish I had called earlier. If I hadnโt waited, if Iโd told herย beforeย deciding to move in with Bo, this conversation would be a lecture and a series of disappointment-filled platitudes.
I thought youโd have learned from my mistakes. I raised you better than this. How exactly are you going to provide for this baby on your own while
working at a cafรฉ? What man will want you now?
And, sure, Iโm using Bo as an unknowing safety net by allowing my mom to think weโre together romantically. But what neither of them donโt know wonโt hurt them.
โIโm fifteen weeks along, as of yesterday.โ I pause, feeling a tinge of guilt. โIt really has been busy. I promise.โ
โWell, thanks for telling me now, I guess.โ
โIย amย sorry, Mom. I think I got in my head about telling you. I wasnโt ready for it to feel real yet.โ
โDoes it feel real now?โ she asks. โNo,โ I answer honestly.
She sighs, some compassion returning to her humming tone. โI felt that way too. Up until they put a teeny, screamingย youย in my arms, it all felt a bit made up.โ
โThen it felt wonderful? The biggest blessing of your life? A gift from the heavens?โ I ask, my voice theatrical.
โSure did. Then scary. Then wonderful some more. Then scary again. You sort of repeat that untilโฆ forever. And if youโreย reallyย lucky, one day, that baby calls you on a random Sunday evening in February and tells you that youโre going to be a grandma.โ
โSurprise,โ I singsong weakly.
โGuess itโs my turn to visitย youย this summer, huh?โ โIโd like that, please.โ
โI take it your schedule is a bit freed up,โ she laughs out.
โAugust may be bestโto make sure the kid shows up before you arrive. Wouldnโt want you here for my due date in case the baby gets stage fright.โย And I donโt want you anywhere near that hospital room,ย I think to myself.
โWell, let me check with Duncan about when a good time for me to come up would be.โ
โDid you get a new psychic? What happened to Maureen?โ
โNo,ย sweetie, Duncan is my beau. Weโre going on four months. Weโve talked about him before. Oh!โ She laughs in delight. โI have aย beau, and you have aย Bo.โ
Duncan? I donโtย thinkย Iโve heard of him before. But I canโt say that to Mom without risking another feud like theย Travisย incident of last July. My mother takes great offence at my lack of interest when it comes to her love life and my inability to keep track of the men coming and going.
I know it makes me a hypocrite, because I couldnโt care less when friends of mine sleep around or are serial monogamists, but Iย hateย it for my mom. Always have. I want more than for her to pour all of herself into a man for a few weeks or months at a time and then feel emptied out when they stop showing up.
โDuncan, right. Of course. Is he a pilot or just very astute at knowing when travel is appropriate?โ I ask, a tad bitchy, Iโll admit.
โWell, I canโt just take off on him, Winnie.โ She laughs at myย obvious
absurdity.
โNo? Not for a few days to visit your only daughter and grandchild?โ โI said Iโll check, Win. Quit sassing your mother.โ
I inhale and exhale slowly, shaking myself. โYeah, okay. Just, let me know, all right?โ
โWill doโฆโ She smacks her lips, searching for another topicโand evidently, comes up dry. โWell, Iโll let you go, then.โ
โOkay, Mom.โ I could ask her to keep talking. Iย couldย tell her how terrifying this all feels. How much I wish I could both fast-forwardย and
rewind time. How much Iโd really like one of her long, tight hugs. But I donโt. โI love you,โ I say instead.
โLove you too, sweet girl. I hope you get plenty of rest. Tell that grandbaby to ease up on you.โ
โWill do. Bye.โ
I hang up and press the phone to my chin, rolling onto my back and staring up at the ceiling. I replay the phone call and feel relieved, knowing that with my motherโtheย queenย of unpredictable emotionsโit could have gone far worse. Andย hey, at least now she knows. I can take that off my eternally long list of to-dos before the babyโs arrival. A list I should, now that Iโm thinking about it, actually write down.
Iโm about to count the day as a win overall, roll over, and pass out on myย veryย comfortable new mattress when I realise I forgot to check whether the door was locked. And while the bed beckons for me to stay and cocoon inside it, I donโt particularly enjoy the idea of being bludgeoned in my sleep or having the house burglarised on night one. So, whining even still, I drag myself out of bed and stumble toward the front door in the dark.
I notice the deadbolt is in place from a distance, but I still go into the entryway to check the handle. I accidentally step on a pile of mail on the floor that must have been delivered through the front doorโs slot.
Robert Durand,ย I read off the top envelope. No time like the present to find out the surname of my baby daddy, I guessโฆ What onย earthย am I doing?
Amongst the collection of flyers and nondescript envelopes is a comic book, still half bent from delivery. I pick it all up with every intention of dropping the pile on the counter and going back to bed. But when I place the mail down, the shiny, floppy comic stares up at me with bright fonts and
colours too interesting to ignore. I decide some late-night reading wonโt hurt and bring the comic to my bedroom.
I get back into bed, fluffing my pillows before I lie against them.ย The Annihilator Issue 392,ย it reads. I wonder if Bo has all three hundred and ninety-one previous editions somewhere. I guess, unlike Caleb, I never ventured into his closet to see what was in there. He could have a lot of stuff I donโt know about. Like more rope, for example.
Nope.ย Thatโs a dangerous thing to imagine. Decidedlyย notย following that train of thought.
And sure, I donโt know who this Annihilator guy isโor why heโs so butthurt that the king of hell has been overthrown by this scantily clad Serinthina badass. But damn, this shit is entertaining from the jump.
There is a large bit of mutual pining going on between these two โenemies,โ and I am eating it up. Iโve also gathered that thereโs some sort of immortal deity that theyย bothย fear, which can only be destroyed if they work togetherโbegrudgingly, of course. I donโt know much else, however, given that I havenโt read the previous issues. Half of these terms, names, and places mean nothing to me. Stillโฆ I sort of love it. On the last page, amidst some excellent banter post battle, Serinthina heavily alludes that these two got down and dirty on the Ice Planetย Borgue. I blame the horny pregnancy hormones for the speed at which I pick up my phone to google which issue that could have been in.
Then Iโm spending a little over three dollars to download issue one hundred and eighty-one onto my phone. All for the sake of getting to know Bo and his interests better, of course.
Not atย allย to see the horny aliens fuck.