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Authors: Michael Lee West

BOOK: Mad Girls In Love
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FROM THE DESK OF CLANCY JANE FALK

June 19, 1974

Dearest Violet,

I haven't written because I've been busy helping Bitsy fix up a nursery for Jennifer. We picked Miss Gussie's old sewing room because it's sunny, then we peeled off the wallpaper. Bitsy went down to Sherwin-Williams and bought pale blue paint. We rolled it on the walls and even the ceiling. I thought it was too much blue, until Bitsy started painting clouds everywhere. Next, we hung gauzy white curtains over the double windows. We found a poofy, ruffled white bedspread and matching pillow shams in the attic, and Dorothy dumped them into the sink and dyed them blue. Byron and Mack painted the furniture white. I found a fluffy white rug at the remnant store. Bitsy's stuffed animals went into the bookcase, then she framed some old lace doilies and hung them over the bed. We did it for under $150, including the rug for $75. Bitsy has found her calling. Only I don't think a living can be made from decorating other people's houses. Mr. Frank has cornered the market in this town, and look what he drives—a beat-up Chevy van.

XX OO

I stood in the cereal aisle at Winn Dixie, trying to decide between Cap'n Crunch and Special K, when I saw a tall man staring. He had shocking red hair and freckles. It took me a minute to recognize him.
Oh, my God
, I thought.
It's him, Dr. Walter Saylor.

“I know you.” His eyes opened wide, showing the yellow irises. “Didn't I fill one of your cavities?”

“Mmmhum.”
Go away
, I thought.

“Is it doing okay?” he asked, eyeing my brown plaid sundress—not my color at all, but it was a gift from Earlene. It had spaghetti straps and a built-in bra that made my teacup-size breasts seem larger.

“Fine,” I said, thinking about our so-called breakfast date. I'd stood him up.

“I'm just doing a little shopping.” He stared down into his cart. I looked, too. He had apples, lettuce, bread, liver loaf, Hellmann's mayonnaise. It was tempting to analyze people by the food in their grocery carts, but I resisted the impulse. These days, I was trying hard not to make snap judgments. Besides, normally my own cart was filled with strange items for Aunt Clancy and would lead someone to deduce that I suffered from a picky palate. Today, my cart was jumbled with soy milk, artichokes, flat-leaf parsley, yogurt, navy beans, chocolate syrup, vanilla ice cream, frozen puff pastry, blue birthday candles, a wheel of Brie, T-bone steaks. It was for Byron's thirty-eighth birthday, which was coming up. On that day, my aunt was actually serving meat and making a cake that called for a dozen eggs.

“I've been wondering about you.” Dr. Saylor tossed a cereal box into his cart. “What was your name again?”

“Bitsy.”

“Oh, right. Now I remember.” He reached for another box. “I waited a long time for you at the truck stop.”

“Sorry about that,” I said, casting about for a convincing lie. Several came to mind, but I discarded them all. Honesty was another part to my self-improvement campaign. But looking at Dr. Saylor's downcast eyes, I just felt terrible.

“Well, you missed a good breakfast.” He sighed. Then his eyes swept over my breasts, down to my feet, then back up to my face. “That's a real pretty outfit. You look like a fashion model.”

I had the oddest feeling that I'd heard these words before—maybe on a deodorant commercial. “Flatterer,” I said.

“I'm not. You're pretty enough to be a movie star. You're real hot-looking. In fact, I'm getting hot.”

I frowned. It seemed wrong to discuss sexual chemistry in the cereal aisle of the Winn Dixie.

Dr. Saylor smiled, dropping another box of Raisin Bran into his cart. He glanced at me again, then picked up a box of Trix.

“You must be crazy about cereal.”

“What? Oh, my gosh.” He blushed, and began placing the boxes back on the shelf. “I don't know what's wrong with me.”

“Well, it was nice seeing you, but I've got to dash off. My ice cream is melting.” I pushed my cart forward.

“So's my heart.” He laid one hand on his chest.

He was making me sick, so I tossed out a “see you later,” and then hurried to the checkout line. I kept glancing over my shoulder, afraid I'd see Dr. Saylor bearing down on me, but he never appeared.

I dropped off the groceries at 214 Dixie, then Aunt Clancy sent me back to town to look for a telescope. She thought it might be a nice present for Byron. I went to Big K and Western Auto, but I returned empty-handed. As I turned up Aunt Clancy's curved walkway I saw a bouquet of yellow roses propped against the screen door. I reached for the white card.

Nice seeing you again.
Love, Walter.

The next morning, I started out the kitchen door, and tucked inside the screen was another large bouquet of roses—pink this time and still dewy from the florist's refrigerator. Despite Claude's wealth, he had never sent me flowers, except for proms, and my two wedding bouquets, which I myself had chosen. As I picked up the flowers, the green paper crinkled in my arms. A white card fell out.

Proof that I don't give up easy.
Love, Walter.

When I came home that afternoon, another bouquet of pink roses was propped crookedly against the screened porch. I took my time walking to the porch, halfway hoping the flowers were a mirage. They weren't. I picked up the bouquet, and a note drifted to the porch steps.

You haunt my dreams.
Love, Walter.

 

I was brushing Jennifer's hair when the doorbell rang. The baby knocked away my hand and raced to the door, screaming for Chick. But when I opened up, a two-foot-tall arrangement fell into the room, spilling water over the floor, along with red roses, carnations, and baby's breath. The water gushed over the card, which dangled from a long piece of red ribbon. I picked up Jennifer, to keep her feet from getting wet, then I reached for the vase. The water had blurred the ink on the card, but the message was clear.

I'm not giving up on you.
Love, W

With my free hand, I scooped up the flowers and marched to the end of the driveway. Jennifer grabbed a fistful of carnations and crammed them into her mouth. “No, bad flowers,” I scolded, thinking she was too old to act this way. She screwed up her face and howled, as if she was in the habit of eating flowers at the Wentworths. Hooking my finger into her small mouth, I raked out the petals. She coughed and wiggled down, out of my grasp. On the ground she glared at me and defiantly held out one hand. Petals littered the small palm.

“Gimme!” Jennifer screeched. Then she stamped her small foot and pointed at the flowers.

“No,” I said. “Bad flowers.”

I dropped the bouquet into the trash can, then slammed down the lid. With a yelp, Jennifer flopped onto the driveway grabbing handfuls of her blond hair, tearing it from its roots—just like my mother. I glanced next door at the pink house and there she was, standing spread-eagle in the dining room window. Ever since she'd moved in with Mack and Earlene, my mother had amused herself by spying on me and Clancy Jane. The rest of the time she was cooking meals for Mack and Earlene. I waved and the curtain fell. A minute later my mother stepped out of the pink house. She wore baggy overalls and a red paisley blouse. And she had forgotten to paint on her eyebrows.

“Bitsy, what's going on? Is the baby hurt?”

“No, M—” I had been going to say, No, Mummy, but I broke off, my lips pursed around the word. I knew she liked for me to call her that. I made a
mmm
sound, but couldn't not push out the other letters without remembering how Claude used to taunt me, saying “Mummy” was a stupid name for a mother. It's true that whenever we'd fight, he'd try and make me feel ashamed. Maybe it did sound affected, as if I were trying to sound British. Maybe it was high time that I called my mother something else.

“No, Dorothy,” I said, surprised at how good it felt to use her actual name. “She's just mad because I won't let her eat the flowers.”

“You can't let a baby eat flowers.”

I frowned, trying to think of a five-syllable word. “Jennifer ate them
intentionally,
” I said.

“Don't be silly. Children don't eat plants unless they're starved.”

Jennifer scrambled to her feet and threw herself at my legs, pummeling them with her fists. “Mine!” she growled.

“Well,” Dorothy said. “You'd better calm her down. If Betty Wentworth finds out, she'll make a fuss.”

Long ago I'd stopped following Dr. Spock's advice; I switched to Dr. Brazleton, who advised ignoring tantrums. I leaned over, trying to brush flowers from the child's pale blond hair. “A guy sent me a bouquet. I didn't want them,” I told Dorothy.

“No!” Jennifer yelped. She reached up with one hand and messed up her hair. “Don't!”

I held up both hands in mock surprise and stared down at my child. Once Jennifer had been a quiet and content baby, but she'd turned into a pint-size delinquent. “Can't you act nice?” I asked, and she violently shook her head.

“A guy?” Dorothy's wide, unpainted forehead creased. “Do I know him?”

“I don't think so.”

“Go on, then. Be mysterious. But it wouldn't hurt you to have a boyfriend.” Dorothy marched over to the trash can, lifted the lid, reached inside, and grabbed the bouquet. “Just
look
at these pretty things. Why, they're carnations. You should be thrilled. It's a
sin
to throw away flowers.”

“Where in the Bible does it say that?”

“Isn't it in Proverbs?” Dorothy scratched her forehead where her eyebrows should have been.

“Yes, it's Proverbs,” Dorothy continued emphatically. “I remember now. Waste not, want not. Or is that one of Benjamin Franklin's sayings?” Her blank forehead moved up and down. “Oh, you've just got me so confused, I can't stand it!”

Dorothy snatched up the flowers, and Jennifer let out another piercing scream. When I tried to pick her up she grabbed the neck of my blouse and yanked down, showing my garage-sale bra. Dorothy paid no attention to the child. She began talking to the bouquet.

“You poor little things. You're all bent. Well, I'll fix you up.” She held out one hand to her granddaughter. “Come on, Jennifer. Dry your tears, honey. Let's take these pretty flowers into my house and put them into a vase.”

Jennifer let go of my shirt and stuck out her tongue, revealing a tiny carnation petal. With her free hand, Dorothy grabbed the baby's chin. “Spit it out, honey.”

Jennifer clamped her teeth and scowled up at Dorothy. “No!”

“Well, go on, then. Eat the nasty thing,” Dorothy said. “But when you get a tummy ache, don't come crying to me.”

Dorothy reached for Jennifer's hand. “Don't you worry. I'll take good care of her. And I'll get that flower.”

“Good luck,” I called, feeling a pang as I watched my daughter slip her hand into Dorothy's.

“I think she could be cutting a molar,” said Dorothy. “I'll check her mouth real good.”

“Maybe it's pinworms,” I called.

“Well, I'm not checking her there. I'll let Chick and Betty deal with that.” Dorothy glanced down at the child. “You don't look wormy to me. Not one bit.”

Jennifer smiled, showing her bunny teeth.

“We'll have tea party, you and me,” said Dorothy. “And after that, I'll let you jump on Earlene's water bed. Won't that be fun?”

“Don't spoil her, Dorothy,” I called.

“I wouldn't dream of it,” she said. “Why, that's the Wentworths' job.”

 

Two days later, I opened the kitchen door, and five bouquets fell into the kitchen. Aunt Clancy stepped into the room, her eyes wide. “From the yellow-eyed dentist?” she asked.

“I'm afraid so. The house already smells like a funeral home.”

“Or a wedding chapel,” said Aunt Clancy. As she gathered the bouquets into her arms, five white cards dropped to the floor.

Each was inscribed with a single word in what I had come to recognize as Walter's crimped handwriting. I laid them out in a line, but they didn't make sense.
Call A Please Me Give.
I rearranged them.

Please Give Me A Call
.

“Maybe you should,” said Aunt Clancy. “I've been asking about him. He's an excellent dentist. At least, that's what my beautician said. According to Stella, he's got a reputation for being a painless dentist, not a womanizer.”

“You talked about me at the beauty shop?” I cried.

“Well,
I'm sorry
, but it just came up while she was bleaching my roots. And I didn't talk about you in particular. I just asked who her dentist was, and when she said it was Dr. Saylor, I almost fell out of the chair. So I egged her on, and, honey, I got an earful. Do you want to hear?”

“No.”

“Sure you do. He told the truth. He
is
separated from his wife. Her name is Fiona, and she's got a reputation for being pushy.”

“They must make quite a couple. I've never heard of a dentist asking for a date with a patient—especially when he's just stabbed a needle into her gum.”

“It's not ethical for doctors; I don't know about dentists. But Stella said he was very business-like when he pulled her wisdom tooth. And the lady in the chair beside me—she was getting a perm?—said that he barely spoke to her when he filled her eyetooth. So he must've been attracted to you.”

“It wasn't mutual.”

“No? Honey, it's been two years since you've been with a man.”

“That's not long. Anyway, I'm just not ready.”

“And when will that be?”

“When I get my life back together. Maybe then the right man will come along.”

“The right man is a myth. Settle for the left. You don't want to lose your dating skills. Don't make a face—it happens. I've lost mine.”

“But you're married.”

“Barely. Anyway, Dr. Saylor might not be the man of your dreams, but can't you practice on him?”

“That wouldn't be very nice.”

“Excuse
me
, Miss Congeniality.”

“I want to concentrate on my daughter, on our visits.”

“Yes, but you deserve a little fun. You don't want to wake up one day and find cobwebs in your vagina.” Aunt Clancy opened a cabinet and selected a green McCoy vase, an old, elegant one shaped like a bouquet of hydrangeas. She turned on the faucet and filled it with water.

“After he's divorced, I might give him a call,” I said, hoping to placate her.

“I know why you're this way. Because of what Claude did to you.” She turned off the faucet and lifted the vase. “I suppose you disapprove of me, seeing as I took Byron from his wife and children. But he and his wife must have been miserable, or he wouldn't have taken up with me.”

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