Packing my stuff takes ten minutes. I donโt have a ton of belongings, just some clothes and toiletries and a Bible. Russell gives me a secondhand suitcase so I wonโt have to carry everything in a plastic garbage bag. My housemates at Safe Harbor throw me a sad little going-away party with take-out Chinese and a ShopRite sheet cake. And just three nights after my job interview, I leave Philadelphia and return to Fantasyland, ready to start my new life as a nanny.
If Ted Maxwell still has concerns about hiring me, he does a great job of hiding them. He and Teddy meet me at the train station and Teddy is carrying a bouquet of yellow daisies. โI picked these out,โ he says, โbut Daddy bought them.โ
His father insists on carrying my suitcase to the carโand on the drive to the house, they give me a short tour of the neighborhood, pointing out the pizza shop and the bookstore and an old rail trail thatโs popular with runners and cyclists. Thereโs no trace of the old Ted Maxwellโthe unsmiling engineer who grilled me on foreign languages and international travel. The New Ted Maxwell is jovial and informal (โPlease, call me Ted!โ) and even his clothes appear more relaxed. Heโs wearing a Barcelona soccer jersey, dad jeans, and pristine New Balance 995s.
Later that afternoon, Caroline helps me unpack and settle into the cottage. I ask about Tedโs abrupt transformation, and she laughs. โI told you heโd come around. He sees how much Teddy likes you. More than
anyone else we interviewed. It was the easiest decision weโve ever made.โ
We all eat dinner on the flagstone patio in the backyard. Ted grills his signature shrimp-and-scallop kabobs and Caroline serves home-brewed iced tea and Teddy runs around the grass like a whirling dervish, still astonished that Iโve come to live with them full-time, every day, all summer long. โI canโt believe it, I canโt believe it!โ he exclaims, and then he falls back onto the lawn, deliriously happy.
โI canโt believe it, either,โ I tell him. โIโm so glad to be here.โ
And before weโve even had dessert, theyโve already made me feel like a member of the family. Caroline and Ted share a gentle and relaxed affection. They finish each otherโs sentences and pick food from each otherโs plates, and together they tell me the charming fairy-tale story of how they met at the Lincoln Center Barnes and Noble some fifteen years ago. Midway through the story, Tedโs hand reflexively drifts to his wifeโs knee, and she rests her hand on top, weaving their fingers together.
Even their disagreements are kind of funny and charming. At one point in the meal, Teddy announces he has to go to the bathroom. I stand to go with him, but Teddy waves me off. โIโm five years old,โ he reminds me. โThe bathroom is a private place.โ
โAttaboy,โ Ted says. โDonโt forget to wash your hands.โ
I return to my seat, feeling foolish, but Caroline tells me not to worry. โThis is a new phase for Teddy. Heโs exerting his independence.โ
โAnd staying out of prison,โ Ted adds.
Caroline seems irked by the wisecrack. I donโt understand what it means, so she explains.
โA few months ago, we had an incident. Teddy was showing off to a couple children. I mean, he was exposing himself. Typical little boy behavior but it was new to me so I may have had an overreaction.โ
Ted laughs. โYou may have called it sexual assault.โ
โIf he were an adult male, it would be sexual assault. That was my point, Ted.โ Caroline turns to me. โBut I agree I could have chosen my words a little more carefully.โ
โThe boy canโt even tie his own shoes,โ Ted says, โand already heโs a sexual predator.โ
Caroline makes an exaggerated show of removing her husbandโs hand from her knee. โThe point is, Teddy learned his lesson. Private parts are private. We donโt show them to strangers. And next weโre going to teach him about consent and inappropriate touching because itโs important for him to learn these things.โ
โI agree one hundred percent,โ Ted says. โI promise you, Caroline, heโll be the most enlightened boy in his class. You donโt have to worry.โ
โHeโs really sweet,โ I assure her. โWith you guys raising him, Iโm sure heโs going to be fine.โ
Caroline takes her husbandโs hand and returns it to her knee. โI know youโre right. I just worry about him anyway. I canโt help it!โ
And before the conversation can go any further, Teddy comes hurrying back to the table, breathless and wild-eyed and ready to play.
โSpeak of the devil!โ Ted says, laughing.
Once weโve finished dessert and itโs time to go in the pool, Iโm forced to admit that I donโt actually own a swimsuitโ that I havenโt been swimming since high school. So the very next day, Ted gives me an advance of $500 against future wages, and Caroline drives me to the mall to shop for a one-piece. And later that afternoon she stops by my cottage with a dozen outfits on hangers, really nice dresses and tops from Burberry and Dior and DKNY, all new or barely worn. She says sheโs already grown out of them, that sheโs
ballooned to a size eight, and Iโm welcome to the clothes before she turns them over to Goodwill.
โAlso, youโre going to think Iโm paranoid, but I bought you one of these.โ She hands me a tiny pink flashlight with two metal prongs sticking out the top. โIn case you go running at night.โ
I switch it on and thereโs a loud crackle of electricity; Iโm so startled I immediately drop it, and the device clatters to the floor.
โIโm sorry! I thought it wasโโ
โNo, no, I should have warned you. Itโs a Vipertek Mini. You clip it on your key chain.โ She retrieves the stun gun from the floor and then demonstrates its features. There are buttons labeledย LIGHTย andย STUN, plus a safety switch that toggles on and off. โIt fires ten thousand volts. I tested mine on Ted? Just to see if it worked? He said it felt like heโd been struck by lightning.โ
Iโm not surprised to learn that Caroline carries a weapon for self-defense. Sheโs mentioned that many of her patients at the VA hospital have mental health issues. But I canโt imagine why Iโd need a stun gun for jogging around Spring Brook.
โIs there a lot of crime here?โ
โHardly ever. But two weeks ago? A girl your age was carjacked. Right in the Wegmans parking lot. Some guy made her drive to an ATM and take out three hundred dollars. So I figure better safe than sorry, you know?โ
Sheโs waiting expectantly, and I realize she wonโt be satisfied until I get out my keyring and attach the device, and it feels like my motherโs looking after me again.
โI love it,โ I tell Caroline. โThank you.โ
The job itself is pretty easy and I adjust to my new routine quickly. A typical workday goes something like this:
6:30โI wake up early, no alarm needed, because the forest is alive with birdsongs. I pull on a robe and make myself hot tea and oatmeal, and then Iโll sit on my porch and watch the sun rise over the swimming pool. Iโll see all kinds of wildlife grazing on the edge of the yard: squirrels and foxes, rabbits and raccoons, an occasional deer. I feel like Snow White in the old animated cartoon. I start leaving out platters of blueberries and sunflower seeds, encouraging the animals to join me for breakfast.
7:30โI walk across the yard and enter the big house through the sliding patio doors. Ted leaves early for work, so heโs already gone. But Caroline insists on serving a hot breakfast to her son. Teddy is partial to homemade waffles, and she cooks them in a special gadget thatโs shaped like Mickey Mouse. Iโll clean up the kitchen while Caroline gets ready for work, and when itโs finally time for Mommy to leave, Teddy and I follow her outside to the driveway and wave goodbye.
8:00โBefore Teddy and I can start the day in earnest, we have to complete a couple minor chores. First I need to lay out Teddyโs clothes, but this is easy because he always wears the same thing. The kid has a vast wardrobe of adorable outfits from Gap Kids but he always insists on wearing the same striped purple shirt. Caroline has grown tired of washing it so she went back to The Gap and bought five more of the same top. Sheโs willing to indulge him, but sheโs asked me to โgently encourageโ other choices. When I lay out his clothes, Iโm supposed to offer a couple different options, but he always lands on the same purple stripes. Afterward, Iโll help him brush his teeth and Iโll wait outside
the bathroom while he uses the potty, and then weโre ready to start our day.
8:30โI try to structure every morning around a big activity or outing. Weโll walk to the library to attend a Storytime Hour, or weโll go to the supermarket and buy ingredients to make cookies. Teddy is easy to please and never balks at my suggestions. When I tell him I have to go into town to buy toothpaste, he reacts like weโre going to Six Flags. Heโs a joy to be aroundโsmart, affectionate, and full of mind-boggling questions: What is the opposite of square? Why do girls have such long hair? Is everything in the world โrealโ? I never get tired of listening to him. He is like the little brother I never had.
12:00โAfter our morning activity, Iโll prepare a simple lunch
โmac and cheese or pizza bagels or chicken nuggets. Teddy will go into his bedroom for Quiet Time, and Iโll take an hour for myself. Iโll read a book, or Iโll listen to a podcast on my headphones. Or sometimes Iโll just lie on the couch and catch a twenty-minute catnap. Eventually Teddy will come downstairs and shake me awake and heโll have one or two new drawings to share. Often he illustrates our favorite activitiesโheโll show us walking through the forest or playing in the backyard or hanging around my cottage. I keep these drawings on the door of my refrigeratorโa gallery of his artistic progress.
2:00โThis is usually the hottest part of the day, so weโll stay inside playing Chutes and Ladders or Mouse Trap, and then weโll slather on sunscreen and go out to the pool. Teddy doesnโt know how to swim (and Iโm not very good
myself), so I make sure he puts on floaties before we get in the water. Then weโll play tag or have a swordfight with the pool noodles. Or weโll climb atop the large inflatable raft and play make-believe games like Castaway or Titanic.
5:00โCaroline gets home and Iโll recap my day with Teddy while she starts preparing dinner. Then Iโll go out for a run, anywhere from three to eight miles, depending on what Russell recommends. Iโll pass all kinds of people out on their sidewalks or watering their lawns, and everyone assumes Iโm a resident of Spring Brook. Some of the neighbors will even wave and call out hello, like Iโve been living here all my life, like I must be someoneโs daughter home from college on summer break. And I love the way it makes me feelโthe sense of communityโlike Iโve finally arrived in the place where I belong.
7:00โAfter running Iโll take a quick shower in the worldโs smallest bathroom, and Iโll fix myself a simple meal in the cottageโs tiny kitchen. Once or twice a week, Iโll walk downtown to browse the local shops and restaurants. Or Iโll attend an open meeting in the church basement of Our Lady the Redeemer. The discussion leaders are very good and the participants are friendly but Iโm always the youngest person in the circle by at least ten years, so Iโm not expecting to make a ton of new friends. I certainly donโt stick around for โthe meeting after the meeting,โ when everyone walks down the block to Panera Bread to complain about their kids, their mortgages, their jobs, etc. After just two weeks of living with the Maxwells, safely cocooned from all temptations, Iโm not even sure I need meetings anymore. I think I can handle things on my own.
9:00โBy this time Iโm usually in bed, reading a library book or watching a movie on my phone. As a gift to myself, I open a subscription to the Hallmark Channel so I can stream unlimited romances for $5.99 a month, and theyโre the
perfect way to unwind at the end of the night. As I turn out the light and rest my head on my pillow, I revel in the comfort of happily ever afterโof families reunited and scoundrels sent packing, of treasures recovered and honor restored.
Maybe this all sounds boring. I know itโs not rocket science. I realize Iโm not changing the world or curing cancer. But after all my troubles, I feel like Iโve taken a huge step forward, and Iโm proud of myself. I have my own place to live and a steady paycheck. Iโm cooking nutritious meals and setting aside two hundred a week for savings. I feel like my work with Teddy is important. And I feel validated by Ted and Carolineโs absolute faith in me.
Especially Tedโs. I donโt see much of him during the day, because he leaves for his office at six thirty every morning. But sometimes Iโll see him at night, after Iโm back from a run. Heโll be sitting on the patio with his laptop and a glass of wine, or heโll be out in the swimming pool doing laps, and heโll wave me over and ask about my run. Or heโll ask about my day with Teddy. Or heโll ask my opinion of some random consumer brandโNike, PetSmart, Gillette, L.L.Bean, and so on. Ted explains that his company designs โback-end softwareโ for big corporations all over the world, and heโs constantly seeking out new partnerships. โWhat do you think of Urban Outfitters?โ heโll ask me, or โHave you ever eaten dinner at a Cracker Barrel?โ And then heโll reallyย listenย to my answers, as if my opinions might actually shape his business decisions. And itโs flattering, to be honest. Apart from Russell, I havenโt met a ton of people who care what I think. So Iโm always happy to see Ted, and I always feel a little charge when he invites me over to talk.
Ironically, the only person at my new job who gives me any trouble is the one person who doesnโt exist: Anya.
Teddyโs imaginary BFF has an annoying habit of undermining my instructions. For example, one day I ask Teddy to pick up his dirty clothes and put them in his laundry hamper. Two hours later, Iโm back in his bedroom, and the clothes are still scattered across the floor. โAnya says Mommy should do that,โ he tells me. โAnya says thatโsย herย job.โ
Another time Iโm frying crispy tofu squares for lunch and Teddy asks me for a hamburger. I tell him he canโt have one. I remind him that his family doesnโt eat red meat because itโs bad for the environment, because cattle are one of the largest sources of greenhouse gases. I serve him a plate of tofu and white rice and Teddy just pushes the food around with his fork. โAnya thinks I would really like meat,โ he says. โAnya thinks tofu is garbage.โ
Now Iโm no expert in child psychology but I understand what Teddy is doing: using Anya as an excuse to get his way. I ask Caroline for advice and she says we just need to be patient, that the problem will eventually take care of itself. โHeโs already getting better,โ she insists. โWhenever I come home from work, itโs always โMallory thisโ and โMallory that.โ I havenโt heard Anyaโs name in a week.โ
But Ted urges me to take a stronger stance. โAnya is a pain in the ass. She doesnโt make the rules around here. We do. Next time she shares her opinions, just remind Teddy that Anya isnโt real.โ
I decide on an approach thatโs somewhere between these two extremes. One afternoon while Teddy is upstairs in Quiet Time, I bake a tray of his favorite snickerdoodle cookies. And when he comes downstairs with a new drawing, I invite him to sit at the table. I bring over the cookies and two glasses of cold milk, and I casually ask him to tell me more about Anya.
โHow do you mean?โ Heโs instantly suspicious.
โWhere did you meet? Whatโs her favorite color? How old is she?โ
Teddy shrugs, like all these questions are impossible to answer. His gaze moves around the kitchen, like heโs suddenly reluctant to make eye contact.
โDoes she have a job?โ โI donโt know.โ
โWhat does she do all day?โ โIโm not sure.โ
โDoes she ever come out of your bedroom?โ Teddy glances across the table to an empty chair. โSometimes.โ
I look at the chair.
โIs Anya here now? Sitting with us?โ He shakes his head. โNo.โ
โWould she like a cookie?โ โSheโs not here, Mallory.โ
โWhat do you and Anya talk about?โ
Teddy lowers his nose to his plate until his face is just inches above his cookies. โI know sheโs not real,โ he whispers. โYou donโt have to prove it.โ
He sounds sad and disappointed and suddenly I feel guiltyโlike Iโve just bullied a five-year-old boy into admitting there isnโt any Santa Claus.
โListen, Teddy, my little sister, Beth, had a friend like Anya. Her friend was Cassiopeia, isnโt that a beautiful name? During the day, Cassiopeia worked for a Disney on Ice show that traveled all over the world. But every night she came back to our rowhouse in South Philly and she slept on the floor in our bedroom. I had to be careful I didnโt step on her, because she was invisible.โ
โDid Beth think Cassiopeia was real?โ
โWeย pretendedย Cassiopeia was real. And it worked out fine, because Beth never used Cassiopeia as an excuse to break rules. Does that make sense?โ
โI guess,โ Teddy says, and then he shifts in his chair, like he has a sudden pain in his side. โI have to go to the
bathroom. I have to make number two.โ Then he climbs down from his chair and hurries out of the kitchen.
He hasnโt touched any of his snack. I cover the cookies with Saran Wrap and put his glass of milk in the refrigerator for later. Then I go over to the sink and wash all the dishes. When Iโm finally finished, Teddy is still in the bathroom. I sit at the table and realize Iโve yet to admire his latest drawing, so I reach for the sheet of paper and turn it right-side-up.