ovember 2008
Alice waited For her mother at the Greek restaurant that Julia liked. She didnโt mind her mother being late. During work hours,
Alice lived in her head and in whatever manuscript she was editingโ questioning the details of each lineโso after hours she initially found conversation, with its awkward pauses, questions, and changes of topic, challenging. She liked her work for the quiet and for the details. She was able to take a book and check, change, and verify that every single fact and timeline was airtight. When she was finished with a manuscript, she knewโand her employer appreciatedโthat it was as correct as was humanly possible.
The waiter kept refilling Aliceโs water, and she kept drinking because it felt like the polite thing to do after heโd gone to the effort.
โI donโt want to be rude,โ the waiter said, when he came by with the water pitcher again. โBut do you play for the Liberty?โ
โNo, I work in publishing,โ Alice said.
The waiter blushed. โIโm sorry. I just thoughtโฆโ
โItโs okay.โ If she was in the right mood, Alice was amused by how her tallness bothered people. Her height immediately exposed men (it was usually men) who had any insecurity. If a guy was a jerk about Aliceโs size, he was a jerk. She didnโt think this waiter was a jerk necessarily, but it didnโt reflect well on him that he couldnโt come up with more than one career option for a tall woman. Or that he couldnโt just keep his mouth shut.
Alice felt her motherโs energy enter the room and smelled her perfume. She looked toward the door. โHi, Mom,โ she said. A wave of cool air hit the back of Aliceโs neck; it was the beginning of November, and New York City was toying with the idea of winter. Alice hadnโt seen her mother for a few weeks, which was unusual. Julia had been busy with work. โYouโre wearing too much perfume.โ Alice wrinkled her nose.
โAm I?โ Julia sat across from her and immediately looked down at the menu, even though she always ordered the same thing: a Greek salad with a glass of white wine. โI must have forgotten and reapplied it before I left the office.โ
Alice studied her mother and noticed she was wearing fresh lipstick too. Julia usually stripped away her office look before she saw her daughter; today she seemed to have doubled down. Juliaโs hair was in a bun, as usual, but a curl had escaped on one side. Alice was looking at the rogue curl when her mother said, โI have a series of things to tell you.โ
โA series?โ Alice smiled. She assumed this was going to be about a new work client, hiring more employees, and perhaps a piece of art that Julia had bought. Her mother sometimes presented her transactions to Alice because she found them exciting, not noticing that her daughter had never had any interest in her motherโs accumulation of wealth or professional prestige. When Alice had taken her first copyediting assignment, Rose said, โI know you chose that kind of job to drive your mother crazy. And itโll work.โ Rose meant the kind of job with low wages, no ladder to climb, and no way toย win.ย Alice had laughed at this. โYouโre a little right, Grandma,โ sheโd said. But she also liked her work and the lack of politics involved. The stock market had crashed earlier that fall, and Alice thought the ladders her mother valued so highly were made of rotten wood. Her friends were all struggling financially, despite their college degrees. Carrie was a bartender who had published six poems in literary journals and was working on a collection. Rhoan lived in a
one-bedroom apartment with his three brothers and was making minimum wage at an internship for an arts library, even though heโd earned a masterโs degree.
โMy sister Sylvie is dying,โ Julia said.
Aliceโs attention snapped back to the present. โDying?โ She remembered the photographs sheโd found in her motherโs bedside table years earlier. The four sisters with curly hair. โIโm sorry,โ she said. โSylvie is the one closest to you in age, right?โ
โWhen I was pregnant with you, I sometimes slept with Sylvie, on a couch. We shared a bedroom when we were children. We used to be very close.โ
Alice tried to imagine her mother as a little girl, sharing a bedroom with another little girl. Julia had just spoken more about her childhood in ninety seconds than she had in the entirety of Aliceโs life. Alice felt an uncertainty inside herself, as if furniture were being shoved into an empty room. She said, โWill you go back to Chicago to see her?โ
Julia made a strange face, as if she were fighting tears, or maybe a smile. โNo,โ she said. She pushed at her hair lightly and said, โSylvie is married to your father.โ
Sylvie is married to your father.ย Alice ran this sentence through her head, but there were too many errors for a copy editor to fix. The structure buckled under its own weight. She tried a tense change: โSylvieย wasย married to my father?โ
Julia shook her head.
The inside of Alice echoed, cavelike. โYouโre not making sense, Mom.โ
โYour father was the one who called to tell me Sylvie is sick.โ โBut my father is dead.โ
โI told you that because he gave up his parental rights to you while you were still a baby. He had mental-health issues, and I think he didnโt feel capable of being a father. But I didnโt want you to feel rejected or feel like it had anything to do with you, because it didnโt.โ
โWait.โ
Julia waited.
Alice wanted clarity; she wanted to make sure she understood the mechanics of what was being said. โYouโre saying that my father gave me up, and because of that, you told me that he was dead?โ
There was a visible vein in Juliaโs temple. โIt seemed simplest to tell you that. It felt like a kind of truth. His name is William Waters, and he lives in Chicago.โ
Alice shook her head. She could hear her heart beating in her ears, as if her organs were moving around her body. She wasnโt sure what her mother said after that or even if she said anything. Alice smiled reflexively at the waiter, who was passing by, and felt a spear sink through her body. Alice missedย something.ย She missedโwildly
โeverything she had wanted when she was young. She needed a backup to her mother, who was saying crazy things while wearing too much perfume and too much makeup. She needed a sibling to roll her eyes at. She needed someone else to say,ย Donโt listen to her. Sheโs lost her mind. Youโre fine. None of this is true.
โExcuse me,โ Alice said, not to her mother but to the tablecloth and the waiter, if he was listening. She pushed back her chair and walked with wobbly legs across the restaurant and out the door. She stood in the dim nighttime air. Broadway was in front of her, a steady grumble of taxis and buses. Building windows were lit yellow against the night sky. Aliceโs heartbeats were still registering in her ears.
Alice pulled her phone out of her backpack, quickly scrolled through her contacts, and pressed the call button.
The phone rang three times, and then Rose said, โHello?โ โGrandma.โ
โAlice!โ Rose sounded pleased. Alice usually tried to call her grandmother a few times a month, because she knew Rose was lonely.
โMy mother just told me that my father is alive.โ
There was a shocked silence through the phone. โGracious,โ Rose said finally.
โIs it true?โ Alice said.
โWell,โ Rose said, โI mean, I havenโt spoken to him lately, but yes, I suppose itโs true. I would have heard otherwise.โ She paused. โWhy in the world would she tell you that now?โ
โSylvieโs sick,โ Alice said, as if handing a piece of mail to another person. She wished she were at home in the apartment she shared with Carrie, where one wall was papered with Ceceliaโs murals. She wished she were standing in front of those images, looking at one strong woman after another, instead of standing on the street while her grandmother made small noises into the phone and her mother was somewhere behind her, a human wrecking ball that had swung into Alice.
Alice had stopped asking about Chicago and her motherโs past when she was a child, for her motherโs sake. Sheโd accepted that the place and people her mother had decided to withhold were never going to be part of her life. When the Internet had become easily searchable, in Aliceโs late teens, sheโd considered looking up her motherโs sisters, butโapart from tracking down Ceceliaโs artworkโ sheโd given the idea up almost immediately. Alice knew her mother wouldnโt want her to, and since Alice no longer needed more family to feel safe, she didnโt seek out the information.
But Alice had been an idiot. Sheโd always known her mother was hiding something; that was why sheโd gone through Juliaโs drawers while she was in middle school. Sheโd thought the secret was Juliaโs, though, and had nothing to do with her. Alice checked facts for a living. She knew how to look for evidence and confirm sources. Julia had offered the young Alice very few facts, however, and there had been no sources to reach out to for verification. What Julia said went unverified, and Alice could see that now. She could see the weakness of what sheโd been handed, and she could see her own weakness in accepting it as truth.
Perhaps other people might have helped her figure this outโ Rose, Carrie, Rhoanโbut the young Alice had grown so tall that no one ever thought to help her, and she prided herself on never asking for help. Everyoneโmen and womenโrushed to Carrieโs aid, even when she was perfectly fine, because she was cute and five feet tall. But the assumption was that Alice never needed help. She could, after all, reach every high shelf and carry her own luggage with no problem. When someone did try to assist her, she suspected them of ulterior motives.
โAre you still there?โ Rose asked.
โYes.โ Sound intensified on the street out of nowhereโa tornado of noise. Countless decibels hit at once. Two ambulances passed Alice, driving in opposite directions. Taxi drivers laid on their horns. The air vibrated with sound, and Alice and Rose had to wait to have any chance of speaking or hearing.ย The city is talking to us,ย Carrie would have said if she were there.
Rose said, โYour mother and aunts have made a real mess of things over the years. Thereโs no point in denying that.โ
โWhy didnโt you tell me the truth, Grandma?โ
Rose harrumphed, โDo you think I didnโt tell your mother she was crazy to lie to you? She didnโt speak to me for a couple years because of that. She started sending me those damn postcards.โ
โNo,โ Alice said. She had taken a home economics class in high school, which mostly involved learning to needlepoint. Alice had been terrible at it, and the teacher would lean over her desk, smelling of cinnamon, and cut away her stitches with tiny scissors. Alice felt like someoneโher mother, she supposedโwere cutting away tiny stitches inside her now. โThatโs not what I asked you. If you didnโt want to tell me while I was living with Mom, I can understand that, I guess. But Iโm twenty-five. You could have told me the real story when I visited you last fall. You could have told me anytime.โ
Alice could hear her grandmother rustling in her kitchen chair, gathering herself into a storm cloud. โI donโt think Iโm the one you should be mad at,โ Rose said. โWilliam could have told you himself, couldnโt he? Heโs your father, and if heโd showed up, it wouldnโt have mattered what your mother said to you.โ
Alice considered this. โThatโs true,โ she said. โI need to know the timeline.โ
โThe timeline? Whatโs that?โ
Alice shook her head. She heard the restaurant door open and close behind her and sensed her motherโs energy nearby again. Alice felt her shoulders hunch up, as if to protect herself. She wasnโt going to explain timelines to her grandmother, how if the chronology of a story wasnโt clear, nothing made sense. Alice almost cried out, because her mother was standing right beside her now. The tiny scissors were cutting, cutting, inside her.
โWhat is wrong with this family?โ Alice said. โThatโs a fair question,โ Rose said.
Julia was clutching her purse as if it were a life preserver. There was an unsteadiness to her face. Alice looked at her and thought,ย I could be mad at you. I could scream at you. But I wonโt. You raised me to take care of myself, and I will.