
FAQ | Buy
the Book
Read excerpts from:
Someone Not Really
Her Mother
and
Lydia Cassatt
Reading the
Morning Paper
|
the bone-frame was made for
no such shock knit within terror,
yet the skeleton stood up to it:the flesh?
it was melted away,
the heart burnt out, dead ember,
tendons, muscles shattered, outer husk dismembered,
yet the frame held:
we passed the flame: we wonder
what saved us? what for?
—H.D., "The
Walls Do Not Fall," in Trilogy
Chapter
One: Hallie
Her mother's bedroom seemed
to float in light, so sunny that Hallie blinked as she
entered. Her mother lay on top of the bed in a slip,
her head on a mound of pillows, her eyes closed. On the
bed table sat an alarm clock and books.
Hallie walked softly toward the bed, hesitating as she
got closer.
Her mother opened her eyes.
"Hi, Mom." Hallie looked around to see where to sit. The blue plush
armchairs sat at the other side of the room. "How are you?"
"Dandy." Her mother's mouth bent into a kind of smile.
Hallie lowered herself gingerly to the end of the bed.
For a moment her mother looked like a girl, polite and
full of compunction.
"It was sweet of you to come all this way."
"I wanted to. I thought I could help."
Her mother looked at her.
"Help? Why? Did your father tell you I needed help?"
"Well." Hallie felt uncomfortable. "He said you've stayed in
bed for almost a month."
"What does he know? He isn't even here half the time. I get out of bed.
I got out this morning."
Hallie could not think what to say. She looked at the
white carpet, shining in the sun. Her mother had so much
more space than she and Morey had in Brooklyn, although
Hallie liked their new apartment. All down the block,
young trees had been planted, and if you bent close to
the front windows you could see the edges of a little
park. Outside her mother's windows, Hallie knew, lay
the two lawn terraces and the pool, and a wash of green
spilling down the hill. In winter, you could look through
the trees to see the valley, tiny farmhouses like white
punctuation marks on larger sheets of ash, sepia, gold,
with the roads winding gray and sometimes silver across
the landscape.
She gazed at her mother's face, a map of tiny wrinkles,
but with the same high cheekbones, the same broad forehead.
Her hair looked thin now, with only touches of blonde
in the gray. Her mother had closed her eyes again, and
Hallie studied the faint blue color of her eyelids. It
reminded her of the forget-me-nots in Rose's garden.
She and Rose used to pick them and put them in orange
juice glasses on the counter for Rose's mother.
Hallie thought about how shy her father had looked this
morning at the airport, waving to Hallie over the crowd
of people. Hal, he had said, bending to kiss her. Awkward,
she had bent to smooth her skirt, but outside, walking
to the car, her heart had thrilled at the familiar scent
of oil and hay, the green flatness and the humid breeze.
In the car as it ambled past new developments and fields
of corn and wheat, Hallie had remembered riding with
her father on errands. His solidity had been quiet and
contemplative, his foot on the pedal urging the car forward,
to the airport sometimes to pick up Grandmother Holloway,
or an aunt or uncle, who would step off the plane looking
dressed up, odd, not like an Ohioan at all, and they
would keep this formal shine, in the design of their
clothes and the way they held themselves, until she and
her father drove them back, and Hallie would sit proudly
in the front, feeling at home.
How's your painting? her father had asked in the car,
glancing at Hallie, a look of uncertainty on his face.
When she had told him about the oils she'd done last
year, he had gazed at the sky for a moment, his hands
clutching the wheel, and asked, Now, do you have people
in them, or landscapes, or are you still making them
kind of abstract?
Sitting on her mother's bed in the early afternoon light,
she thought of those canvases, with pencilled arrows
and angles, compass points, sketched on top of delicately
modelled white and gray, aerial views of a wilderness,
filled with mountains that, from the air, looked small,
barely perceptible. She had begun with earth tones, but
gradually she'd turned to white and shades of gray, sometimes
a speck of red, so surprising in the expanse that it
had the impact of a sudden moment of violence, or passion.
Each one had "Map" in the title, for they were
maps, maybe of the heart, more than of any actual place,
and of the body too. She'd been proud of those, and two
had sold.
This spring, though, she'd come to an impasse. She'd
attempted to move on to something new, but she hadn't
been happy with any of her sketches. She hadn't even
felt able to begin stretching a new canvas. She would
stare out the window of her studio, studying the gray
building opposite, and the cars below, the pigeons roosting
on lintels and jutting sills, the changing sky. She'd
look for any excuse to wrap things up and turn off the
light, walking the five stories down to the street.
"How's Morey?" Her mother's blue eyes looked amused and bitter.
"He's fine."
"He didn't feel like coming to Ohio?" Her mother emphasized each
syllable of "Ohio."
"He's really busy." Hallie tried to look open, as if her mother's
questions were simple. She added, "His firm has a new commission, for
a big project on Long Island."
"Oh?" Her mother looked at Hallie as if she might say something about
Morey or architects, or big projects on Long Island. Hallie stood up and looked
out the window. A wheelbarrow, filled with weeds, sat by one of the beds, and
a hand-rake lay on the walk.
"Who's been gardening?"
Her mother used to hire a local college student to do
the gardening, in the spring and fall. In the summer,
the garden spilled over its bounds and straggled. Hallie
had always been relieved to see a new student each September,
kneeling on the stone walkway, pulling out armfuls of
weeds, pinching off the heads of marigolds and cutting
back the phlox, their leaves whitish from summer blight.
Her mother laughed a dry laugh. "Your father's become
a gardener. Although I doubt that he knows what he's
doing."
Hallie looked at the flower bed. Someone had planted
a cheerful bunch of lavender and white flowers along
the border.
"It looks like he's doing a good job," she said, and her mother gave
a soft snort.
As she looked at her father's gardening gloves, abandoned
by the side of the pool, Hallie thought about how puzzled
and sad Morey had looked this morning at breakfast, sitting
at the counter in his old t-shirt and jeans. She missed
him now. As soon as she was away from him, she missed
him. At home, though, things he did could touch off a
fury inside her. She could be having a difficult time
with him, arguing about something, and as soon as the
phone rang, he'd be genial, laughing and making jokes.
Often he'd miss dinner without warning, and come home
from work around ten or eleven at night. He had become
so busy that they hadn't left the city once this summer.
In other summers, on good days, they had sometimes packed
up the car to find a beach near a small town. Hallie
would sketch or work in her notebook, and Morey would
read the paper. Sometimes he would lie on his back with
the newspaper over his head, like an old man, and fall
asleep, while Hallie studied the horizon and wondered
what it would be like to catch the breezes on a sailboat.
Hallie looked at her mother's face on the white pillows.
She found herself thinking about Morey, how she'd first
loved him because he believed in painting as something
important in the world. His father had been a painter,
although he had never become well known, and Morey had
told her how, growing up, he had watched the way a canvas
takes on color and shape. Morey had admired her work,
and at first she had wished him to see each new painting
from conception on, yet somehow she had begun to keep
her new work to herself. She had discovered that the
smallest amount of criticism from him, even a pause,
could send her into a period of terrible doubt, when
she felt compelled to put turpentine on a rag and rub
out all of her new strokes by the end of each day.
Her mother picked up the alarm clock and began to wind
it.
"You know, Rose lives in town now. She moved here a few years ago, right
back to the house on Broadway."
"I know." How can Rose live here, thought Hallie, so far from an
ocean? An image came to her, of Rose opening and closing her mouth for breath
in the moist Ohio air, but she rubbed it out, thinking, Rose is different from
me. A place changes depending on who's looking at it.
Coming into town this morning with her father, Hallie
had thought with surprise, how thriving and substantial
this is. In her memory, the houses had a somber cast,
an untended look. This town looked polished, even wealthy.
The large rectangles and squares of old houses looked
imposing, a bright white, as on a New England green.
Perhaps her memories had begun to resemble photographs
from her childhood, black and white, with sharply cut
figures squeezed between four lines. How funny to have
to discover that a place had its own life, outside of
photographs or memories: this boy here, skateboarding,
or that plump tabby cat on the porch, asleep under baskets
spilling flowers—oh! Hallie had thought, that's
Rose's house, and as the car rolled on she had turned
to look again at Rose's wide, calm porch fronting Broadway.
Quickly, she had looked to the other side of the street,
to see the open space where her first house used to be.
She could not remember when the house had been torn down.
It must have been a long time after they moved, because
she used to stand on Rose's porch afterwards, looking
across Broadway to see her old house's humble shape.
She had been seven when the walls had become suddenly
bare, as chairs and beds made a parade outside to the
moving van. Magnificent trees, thick and arching, still
stood, shading the lawn, and for one moment Hallie thought
she could see the house again in its natural space, with
its white face to the street.
Hallie glanced at her mother. She looked as if she might
be asleep. What had they been talking about? She gazed
at the curtains and at the sky, now a pale blue, the
sun whitened. Rose, she thought, Rose of the thick red
hair, so different from her own thin brown hair cut in
an airy bowl around her face. Rose's hair had had a will
of its own. Sometimes Rose's mother had pulled it into
a French braid or knot, but most of the time she had
let Rose brush it back to be caught in a thick bee-swarm.
Broadway had been the river to be negotiated. You had
to be careful, crossing, and wait on the island in the
middle until all of the cars and trucks were out of sight,
but even at five Hallie had crossed on her own. Rose
had created a system of signals: a white washcloth waving
from Rose's porch meant come over, and a red cloth, waved
up and down, meant come in ten minutes, or in circles
over your head meant I can't play now, and blue meant—what
had blue meant? Hallie couldn't remember.
"You know she's pregnant again."
Hallie hugged her elbows. She looked her mother full
in the face, daring her to say more.
"I saw her downtown a month ago, as big as a church, with her daughters.
The youngest one—what's her name?"
"Sophie."
"Sophie was throwing a tantrum on the sidewalk."
Hallie shrugged, and saw again in her mind's eye the
streaks of brown blood heralding her fifth, and last,
miscarriage. That evening, she had sat in the bathroom
of the restaurant as the blood came in earnest, against
all of her inner commands to her uterus to hold out and
keep what could still, miraculously, become a baby. The
thick clots of blood, dark red, had seemed to Hallie,
against all knowledge, signs of her own insufficiency.
She had only pretended to be an ordinary woman, with
a whole and satisfactory body.
"I'll just do a little unpacking." Hallie carried her bag down the
wide hall into her old room at the front of the house.
The bed was high but small. Hallie thought of her grandmother,
Sarah Holloway, who had given her the white cover with
tiny blue flowers embroidered along the edges. She had
seen her grandmother as formidable, a quietly strong-willed
woman, not particularly warm or easy to talk to. She
had been born and raised in Virginia, and had lived all
her married life in Philadelphia. For days before Grandmother
Holloway's annual visit, Hallie's mother would clean
the house as if she were another woman, dusting bookshelves
and clearing off each surface until the house had a starched
look Hallie loved. During Grandmother Holloway's stay
the family would eat together in the dining room, on
her mother's wedding china, instead of at the kitchen
table with paper napkins and regular dishes. Grandmother
Holloway asked for water with her lunch, an elegant austerity
Hallie had held in awe.
Hallie missed the mother who could bring her small family
together at the table. Sometimes, on a magical Sunday,
even when Grandmother Holloway was not there, Hallie's
mother would rise out of bed and decide to make chicken
fried the way her old cook had taught her. Hallie would
help her flour the thighs and breasts and watch as her
mother placed the pieces in the pan, sizzling in oil.
Her mother seemed to her at such times a lovely woman,
confident in her movements, and Hallie stood close to
her, as if such beauty could shine on her and protect
her always.
Most Sundays were different, but so habitual that Hallie
thought nothing of them. One Sunday morning, in the old
house, Rose had come over and Hallie had helped her make
a sandwich. Where's your mother? Rose had asked. Asleep,
said Hallie. Is she sick? No, and suddenly Hallie had
had a new thought. Other children's mothers did not sleep
all morning and deep into the afternoon. She remembered
with amazement how Rose's mother was always awake, and
how she made sandwiches, cutting them into triangles
on white plates and placing them on the table, and she
felt ashamed.
"Charles!" Hallie could hear her mother calling. She got up and opened
her door just enough to see her mother standing in her slip at the top of the
stairs.
"Charles! Where is he?" and she looked lost, like a child who cannot
find its mother in the middle of the night because the house's darkness is
too thick between them.
Hallie waited until she heard
her mother move back to bed. Her father started up
the mower outside, and she wondered if his feet were
bare, as they always used to be. Wild cherries, rotting
on the second lawn terrace, above the pool, would stain
his toes and sometimes he would stub a toe on a stone
and shout "Damn!" Once
he stepped on a bee, and Hallie remembered how his foot
had swollen like a water bottle and how he had had to
go down to his office and ask his nurse, pretty Mary
Helen Hennessey, who always gave her a lifesaver, to
give him a shot.
She slipped into the hallway. The large mirror, with
bevelled edges that made a rainbow, held the light. She
went into the study, across from her room, and sat at
the cherry writing desk with the cubbyholes and the slanting
lid. The phone sat, stolidly, black with a circular dial,
the same one that had always been here. Hallie put her
finger into one of the circles and moved the dial, letting
it go to hear the clickety whirr. Her father's medical
school books, fat textbooks with long Latinate names
in gold letters, sat on the bottom shelves. As a child,
she had tiptoed in here sometimes to open them, breathing
in the smell of old paper and contemplating the tiny
print and little diagrams with letters—"a," "b," "c," "f," "z"—pointing
to organs or blood vessels, bones or layers of flesh.
Opening the phone book, she thought, Rose, Rose, and
paused. Good heavens, what was her last name now? Banford,
it had been, but William's name was (Hallie tapped a
pencil on the cherry desk and looked out the window,
surprised to see a hummingbird at the edge of the front
lawn) Haas. I haven't seen Rose for years now, thought
Hallie, remembering how Rose and William had come to
New York for a couple of days one June. Rose had been
pregnant with her first child then, her huge belly almost
disturbing to Hallie. Hallie owned only a handful of
photographs of Rose, two of them from that visit. In
one, Rose was sitting at the kitchen counter in the old
loft, her blue flowered dress sleeveless, her arms plump.
She leaned toward William, laughing, her mouth stuffed
with cake and her fingers covered with yellow frosting,
like pollen. In another, Rose stood next to the big window,
her arms folded over her belly. She looked straight at
the camera with a wry, half-smiling, questioning gaze.
As a child, Hallie had admired Rose's superior knowledge
of the world. Rose had known all about babies, and about
the astonishing ovaries curled inside Hallie's and Rose's
slender bodies, and the regal Fallopian tubes holding
open passageways for the eggs that would one day emerge,
and the sturdy uteruses, strong as Rose's fist when she
shook it in anger. Rose would trace her finger along
Hallie's belly, showing the position of each tight organ,
as if she had the power to see through Hallie's skin,
into the bowl of her future. Rose's house had been filled
with babies—two came after Rose—and with
information too. You could ask Rose's mother anything,
Hallie thought, and she would not look shocked. Not that
Hallie ventured such questions, but she saw how to make
discoveries by just keeping her ears open when Rose or
her older sister Catherine made inquiries.
For years, in fact, Hallie had believed that such information
could only come in the form of an English accent, the
Banfords having come to Ohio from England when Rose was
four. Hallie had loved to hear Rose's mother speak, her
voice gentle and odd. She's from Bath, Rose had told
her, only she calls it Bahth. Bath? Hallie had asked
doubtfully, amazed that a whole town could be named for
something so small and ordinary. An improbable transplanting,
Hallie mused now, as she looked up the H's in the phone
book and saw Haas, Rose and William, 200 Broadway. Rose's
father had been handsome, with hair over his forehead
and a quick smile. He had been the editor of the newspaper
in the bigger town nearby, a position that had seemed
vaguely royal to Hallie. He wrote poetry, too, and two
slender books of his poems sat right on the shelf of
the Banfords' living room. All this was unusual in Hallie's
world. Her mother and father read books, but she had
never known someone who wrote them. She had tried to
read his poems once, when she was about ten, and she
remembered a lot of descriptions of trees, and one phrase: "you
branch and flower."
Have an egg? he had asked her once at breakfast at Rose's
house, his hair uncombed, his eyes bright, as if cut
with light. Oh, yes, she had said, please, and she had
blushed as he got her an egg cup and tapped the egg open
for her, the insides yellow and smooth and wet, his fingers
quick, scooping out the small bit of the egg's hat and
offering it to her in the spoon. He had married again
after Mrs. Banford's death, she had heard, a much younger
woman, and Rose had written to her two years ago to say
that he had died.
It was Mrs. Banford, Hallie thought, who had told her
stories about fairies—not fairy tales, but stories
about tiny creatures with wings, who might tip the spoon
out of your cereal bowl or make your hair look as if
you'd been rolling around in hay, or bring you good dreams
on a moonlit night. And Rose had had a gift for knowing
how fairies could be lured into little houses made of
bricks and stones, filled with miniature chairs and tables
and beds, with bits of dandelions and purple myrtle flowers
left inside as offerings. Rose and Hallie would become
absorbed for hours, on long summer days in the Banfords'
garden, creating houses for these small folk. Was it
a propitiation, Hallie wondered now (she picked up the
receiver and began to dial), and why did fairies need
to be propitiated? What would a fairy do if you did not
feed it raspberry jam on tiny crackers? Or was the idea
to make the fairies comfortable, to give them a home
and a place to rest, when so many people gave them no
thought at all?
"Hello?"
Hallie's throat felt suddenly thick. "Rose?" she
asked.
The mower droned to a halt, and as Hallie hesitated,
she saw her father, in his sandals, walk across the front
yard. He bent toward the mailbox, and, opening it, peered
inside, pulling out a bundle of envelopes and catalogues.

Back to Top | Return
to Books Page
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Excerpted from Ohio
Angels by
Harriet Scott Chessman. Copyright © 2004 by
Harriet Scott Chessman.
All rights reserved. This excerpt, or any parts thereof,
may not be reproduced without permission. |