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BOOK: Barbara Samuel
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She put the cat down and drifted into the chair next to him. He sighed and put his arm around her, his head falling into the crook of her shoulder. The weight was exactly right, fitting her just as it should. “Why did you come over?”

“Because I was an idiot last night and I wanted to tell you that.”

“You were an idiot.”

She laughed softly. “It’s not polite to agree with a woman who is trying to apologize.”

He rubbed his nose against her neck. “Are you?”

“Yes, I’m sorry I doubted you. You’re right—you’ve never lied to me. You don’t seem to lie at all.”

“I don’t.” He tugged her closer, putting his other arm around her. “Come sit on my lap, let me hold you.”

“I’m too big. I’ll crush you.”

“Come on.” He straightened and made room for her. Luna settled gingerly, but his legs felt sturdy beneath her, solid as he was, and she relaxed as he put his arms around her. “I’m in love with you,” he said. “It really did happen fast, but maybe that’s just because it’s right, you know?”

Her heart pinched at the husky, warm sound of his voice. “I’m in love with you, too,” she whispered, and it felt so good to just say it. Just let it be. She put her
arms around his shoulders and it was her turn to put her nose against his neck. It made her dizzy, it was so right.

“You smell like roses,” he said.

“I bought the girls some perfume.”

“How’s Maggie?”

“She’ll be all right. How are you?”

“I’m okay.” He tightened his hold and his voice was raw with unshed tears as he added, “Man, I’m gonna miss her.”

“I know.”

“What did she say to you?”

Luna straightened. Put her hands on his face. “She told me you were a good man.”

“I am,” he said.

“Yes, you are.” Luna kissed him.

“I’m so glad she burned her house down. I would never have met you otherwise.”

“Me, too,” she said.

“Are we on, Luna?”

“On?”

“You gonna let me love you? Even if I can’t say it’ll be happily ever after?”

“Yes,” she whispered, and touched his face. “Sometimes, things can work out, I guess.”

“I have a good feeling,” he said.

“So do I, Thomas.” She kissed him, very gently. “So do I.”

From
Travellady Magazine:

Día de los Muertos
by David Schultz

El Día de los Muertos,
or the Day of the Dead, is a traditional Mexican holiday that honors the dead. The tradition is celebrated just about anywhere there is a substantial Hispanic population, as there is here in New Mexico.

The festivities include all manner of skeletons that are shown dancing and singing; detailed tissue paper cutouts called
papel picado;
candles and votive lights to help the departed find their way; wreaths and crosses decorated with paper or silk flowers; and fresh seasonal flowers, particularly
cempazuchiles
(marigolds) and
barro de obispo
(cockscomb). Edible goodies offered to the dead are skulls and coffins made from sugar or chocolate and special baked goods, especially sugary sweet rolls called
pan de muerto
that come in various sizes and topped with bits of dough shaped like bones. All of these goods are destined for the buyer’s
ofrenda de muertos
(offering to the dead).

The spirits of the dead are believed to come home for a visit on this holiday and the repast is laid out for them to provide sustenance for the journey….
El Día de los Muertos
is not for sorrow and sadness but to celebrate the good times and to remember the happiness shared in the past. Take a day off and dance with the departed. You’ll be glad you did.

Twenty-six

Maggie’s Diary

2 Noviembre 2001,
Día de los Muertos

Dear Tupac,
Luna, that’s my friend’s mom, says it’s perfectly okay to write my diary to you if I feel comfortable doing it, and I don’t think you’d mind, so I’m going to keep doing it. Sorry I haven’t written in so long, but there has been a lot going on.

First, my mom is finally, finally better. She almost died of an overdose that was mainly an accident, but that got her into treatment and she spent three weeks in the hospital, then two more weeks going every day. They gave her some different medicine, but on
one
, something that’s supposed to help keep her from getting so depressed. She also joined this grief support group, which seems to be helping. Anyway, she’s lots, lots, lots better, and if she keeps getting better for another month, the doctors will let me go live with her again. I’m staying with my grandma, of course. It’s not so bad. They were all worried about me after it first happened, and everybody was all sorry that they didn’t see how awful it was, but I’m not mad at anybody. Luna said it’s pretty normal for kids to think it’s their responsibility to take care of their parents, so I was over my head, but I was doing normal things. It’s fun to hang out with Ricky—Imean
Ricardo
(he was never
Ricardo before—he just started doing it lately, but that’s okay, Iguess, except it makes me think of Ricky Ricardo from
I Love Lucy).
Him and Joy are still going out, and they really like each other. Joy’s kinda started looking different lately, too. She even wore a skirt to school one day and it was a hip-hugger thing that showed her belly ring. Yvonne was about to blow her stack, but she leaves Joy alone now because too many people like her. People are jealous of me being her best friend, but we’ve been through a lot together, you know? It’s deep.

Joy almost had to go home to Atlanta, because her dad, the big jerk, wanted to get custody back. But then his wife, April, left him because he was cheating on her, and she promised she would testify for Joy, so he backed off. They came out to visit right after it happened, and Joy’s little brothers were totally cute.

Second thing is, my English teacher sent one of my poems to a magazine and they are going to
publish it
!!!!!!! She said that’s really good for a kid who is only fifteen. I even get money—$25. They put the news in the school paper, and then it even went into the Taos paper!

But here’s what I really wanted to tell you about—
Día de los Muertos.
That’s today. Day of the Dead, in case you don’t know. It’s a really cool thing, and it was so great today. My mom and me and my grandma and oh, everybody, went to the graveyard to take care of my dad’s grave. We brought all kinds of marigolds with us, and these little skeleton candies and we brought his favorite food—my mom’s tamales, which she actually made from scratch, just for this, for everybody to share. She wore his favorite green dress and brought a little bit of beer to pour on his grave, then we shared it, all of us taking a sip. She’s gained some weight and
looked so pretty there that I saw a lot of men noticing her, so whenever she gets ready, there will be a new husband for her.

Lots of people go take care of their families’ graves, so we saw all kinds of people and they were so nice to my mom. We saw Thomas and Luna and Joy, who went to take care of Mrs. Ramirez’s grave. My mom wanted to stop there, too, so we did, and I realized I kinda miss the old lady. I told my mom about going to see her, asking for help, and how kind she was that day, and Thomas squeezed my shoulder.

Then afterward, me and my mom went to Luna and Joy’s house for supper. It was a big party—all kinds of people were there, nearly every single one a woman except for Thomas and this guy named Frank who is Joy’s grandma’s husband. There was a Barbie doll in the middle of the table, the really old yucky one Luna brought home from the land, but that’s why it was there, of course, because they don’t know where Jesse is buried, or it’s far away, so they were honoring him at home, with his favorite foods. They played the Beatles all night long and then Elaine announced that she was going to be singing at a café in Taos next week and she’d like it if everybody came. She was all shy and turned red when she said it, but you could tell how proud she was, too. Joy winked at me and took a big deep breath, so I did, too, and smelled the blues-lady perfume.

It was one of the best days I’ve ever had. And when I was sitting there, looking at everybody, with my mom sitting right beside me, all the lamplight falling down on people laughing, and feeling so much love in the room, I felt my dad beside me for a minute. Just loving me and my mom, seeing us. I could almost smell him.
And my heart filled up like you wouldn’t believe, just almost burst open with happiness.

I kept some marigolds and put them on the shrine I made for you, since I don’t know where your grave is. Iguess you’d like being remembered since you died so young. I lit a candle for you, too, and I was sitting there, thinking about my dad and my mom and everything, and I saw that dollar bill with “Tupac Is Alive” on it, the one I got the day my dad was buried. And I finally realized what my dad was trying to tell me. That you are alive, even if you’re dead, as long as there is somebody to remember you. You’re alive in my heart, just like my dad is, because I remember you. I’ll have to find out what your favorite food was and eat it next year.

And what I thought, sitting there, was that sometimes life is really hard. It just is. Things happen that make you want to die, but if you hang on, they do eventually get better. I think I should write a poem about that.

Love,
Maggie

Turn the page
for an exciting peek
at Barbara Samuel’s
next book,
The Goddesses of Kitchen Avenue

Coming in hardcover wherever books are sold
Published by
The Random House Publishing Group

Prologue

Trudy
The first time I see Lucille again, I am lying in my bed. Alone. My newly broken arm is propped on a pillow. It’s very late, close to dawn. My face is hot from crying and loss and Vicodin, which they gave me at the emergency room. The drugs are not appreciably helping stop the pain in my right arm, which is imprisoned in a cast to my elbow. It’s red. The cast, that is. Probably the arm, too, which feels like coyotes are chewing on it. And the world seems red, too, all around the edges.

When I open my eyes, Lucille is sitting in the chair where Rick always throws his clothes. She looks exactly the same, which should tip me off that something is slightly wrong, but in my current state, nothing seems real, so I just blink at her for a long minute.

It’s been twenty-five years since I’ve seen her. She’s wearing a shawl that a matador gave her, red with black silk fringes she plays with. There are heavy silver bracelets on her tanned arms, and she’s drinking a cocktail. It’s funny enough that I smile. Lucille always did believe in cocktails. My mother said she was a drunk, but she
wasn’t. I knew even then that my mother was just afraid of Lucille. Afraid of her sexuality, afraid of her courage, afraid of her version of womanhood. Afraid it would leak out of her house somehow, like bad water, to poison the whole neighborhood. My mother and her friends, all the ladies on the block, said terrible things about Lucille’s clothes—gossamer blouses that showed her low-cut bras, the sleek way she wore her hair and let all of her back show, nape to waist, on summer days. She told me it was a woman’s secret power, her back. It didn’t age the way other parts might.

Men found reasons to stop by her yard when she was working with her flowers, the flowers she nudged like magic daughters from the hard ground in the desert. Poppies as big as sombreros, waving long, black, inviting stamens from their silky hearts, and roses in impossible colors, and cosmos by the thousands.

The men stopped to admire her back. And her strong brown arms, and the glimpse of her lacy bras.

But mostly they stopped to hear that wild, bold poppy laugh come out of her throat. Stopped to have her admire them. Stopped to be watered by her joy

She was sixty-six years old when she moved into our neighborhood.

Now it has been twenty-five years and she’s at the foot of my bed, not in some ghostly form, but as solid as the cat purring on my hip. When she doesn’t say anything, I swallow the rawness in
my throat and croak, “What are you doing here?”

“Time to take it back, kiddo.”

“What?”

“Your life.”

Mother, the moon is dancing
In the Courtyard of the Dead.
“D
ANCE OF THE
M
OON IN
S
ANTIAGO

Federico García Lorca

2

Trudy
When Edgar dies, I am next door in my house, reading Lorca with my hands over my ears so I don’t have to hear the wind. It’s only because I have to take them down to turn the page that I hear Roberta’s cry, that piercing wail that can only be called keening.

It’s been a long day, waiting for this. Because I wanted to be here when the moment arrived, I didn’t go to the movies or out to the mall to distract myself from my own troubles. Roberta’s granddaughter, Jade, is on her way to Pueblo from California, but she isn’t here yet, and Roberta sent everybody else away. When the moment comes, she’ll need someone. So I’ve waited. Trying to keep warm—I’m wearing a T-shirt, a cotton
sweater and a wool one, two pairs of socks, and jeans—and I’m still cold. It’s like Rick was my furnace, and without him, I’m turning into an icicle.

And the wind is driving me crazy.

People often tell me how much they love the wind. I’ve sat, with my mouth open, while friends from elsewhere—they are always from somewhere else—rhapsodize about the winds they know, and I can tell that they’re thinking of an entirely different entity—a green goddess, trailing her veils over the beach or through the forest. They love a wind that comes with moisture and beauty.

In Pueblo, our winds are of the Inquisition variety, winds that know that the secret of torture is to begin and end, to be inconstant and constant at once, to bellow and to whisper. Endlessly.

This year, it’s been even worse than usual. Every morning, it gathers, gusting and stopping. Blasting and quitting. All day, it bangs on the windows and blusters around the car and buffets the trees and tears at the shrubs. Boxes blown from who knows where skitter down the street. There is no surface without grit. Static electricity can knock you down. I play music, loudly, to drown it out, put a pillow over my head at night.

But not today. I have to listen for Roberta.

For lunch, I pour some condensed chicken and stars soup into a pot and put the kettle on for tea, huddling next to the burners with my hands tucked under my armpits. The tea is indifferent, the soup the last can on the shelf. I was lucky to find that much worth consuming, really, since I keep forgetting to go to the grocery store. Right now, when I’m hungry for something better than
the cupboards have to offer, I look around for my list so I can write
good tea bags
on there, but it’s gone missing. Again. I can’t keep track of anything lately.

I used to spend at least two hours a week planning menus and shopping for my crew of five. Now it’s only me and my seventeen-year-old, Annie, but more often than not she eats at school or at her restaurant job or with her boyfriend, Travis. As long as I keep milk and cereal and frozen pizzas around, she’s covered.

I keep forgetting that it might be good for me to cook for myself. Nobody ever liked the same foods I do—my roasted veggie dishes and exotic soups. Time to indulge. On my list, I write,
Garlic, marinated pepper strips, lemon juice, whole pepper. Frozen quiches. Cheddar (the good one), Triscuits.

I won’t forget the single-serving cans of tuna, which have been the mainstay of my diet lately. It’s easy, and at least the cats get enthusiastic when they hear me pop the lid. I always pour the water off into a bowl for them. They are immensely grateful and I can glow over it for a good five minutes, standing at the counter eating out of the can.

I know, I know. Cats, tuna—this has all the earmarks of a Bad End.

The kettle whistles and I pour water into my cup, think maybe I’m just getting old. Bones thinning along with my skin, muscles withering away to nothing. I think of my granny, wizened down to broomstick size, and pull my sweater tighter around my torso.

Not old, not old, not old. Not at forty-six.
Forty-six is young these days, or at least just beyond the cusp of middle age.

Wind blusters against the windows, and I hear the sound of the chimes my new neighbor hung on his porch. His things appeared abruptly overnight three days ago, like the plumage of some exotic bird—a trio of chimes strung across the porch, a cluster of sticks and painted canvas in the side yard that promised quiet and other things, a foreign car I thought might be an English Mini, strange and small and orange. A ristra, cheery, bright red chiles in a string, hung by the door, nothing strange by itself. But it almost seemed that there was a new scent in the air, spice and chocolate and the promise of fresh yeast. Shannelle, the young mother across the street, said she’d glimpsed him, and widened her eyes to illustrate her amazement.

I move to the window to peer out. My breath makes a thick circle of condensation on the glass. At first I can only see the car, a blurry round like a giant pumpkin, so I wipe away the fog and cover my mouth with my fingers. As if called by my curiosity, he comes out on the porch.

Oh.

Despite the cold, he wears no shoes, and only some Ecuadorean-style pajama bottoms riding low on hips the color of a sticky bun. Hair runs in a fine line up the center of his belly like a stripe of cinnamon. Heavy silver bracelets cuff his dark wrists. A necklace of claws, something made in a jungle, hangs around his neck.

He stretches, showing the tufts of hair beneath his arms. I find myself holding my breath with
him, letting it out again only when he lowers his chin and, in an insouciant gesture, tosses back his hair to show his face. It looks good from this distance, a high brow and wide mouth. Hair, thick and wavy, pours down to his shoulders in a tangle of honey and butter.

I half expect him to look my way, feel my gaze like some magic being, but he only bends over to pick up a newspaper and goes back inside.

Lazy thing
, I think,
sleeping until past noon.

I carry my tea and soup into the dining room, put down a place mat on the table even though there’s no strict need for it. It’s not as if the table needs protecting—it’s ancient and beautiful, if scarred from twenty-some years of family dinners—but I like the homey look of the floral pattern against the wood. I think it might be for show, in case anyone happens by, a way to demonstrate that I’m doing just fine, but that’s okay, too. I get a matching napkin out of the drawer and center everything on the mat, look for a magazine to read, trying to recapture the sense of well-being such old rituals used to give me when Rick went off riding with his buddy Joe Zamora, and the kids were at friends’ houses or skating or whatever. In those days, time alone was a luxury—I’d put on some music no one else liked and fix some soup only I would eat, like my very special corn chowder, and read in the blissful aloneness.

But the evening looms. The house thunders with emptiness. How could my old life be over so suddenly that after years and years of never having a minute to draw my breath now I have so much
time that I feel myself sinking into it like quicksand, drowning in it?

A mother finished. A wife dismissed.

Cliché-city.

“God, Trudy,” I say to myself aloud, since there’s no one else to say it to. “You are boring me to death now. Do something.”

So I find the collection of Lorca’s poems, which I’ve been reading in an attempt to renew my acquaintance with Spanish—a passion I left behind somewhere. His work is appropriate to accompany the sound of Roberta’s singing that comes to me between bursts of wind. The houses are not that far apart and she’s got one of those big, black Southern gospel kinds of voices, like Aretha Franklin, though she pooh-poohs that comparison. I knew when I heard her that she was singing her husband Edgar’s favorites for him.

One last time.

Letting him go at last. He’s been in a diabetic coma for two weeks, since just after supper one Friday night. I was sitting with her when it happened—he’d been sick for a while, pieces of his body just eaten away by the disease—and she grabbed his hand, and cried out, “Edgar, don’t you
leave
me!” in such a heartbroken voice that I had to go home and cry about it later.

The hospice workers and the nurse who came in every day kept saying they didn’t know what in the world was keeping him alive. But I knew. So did Roberta.

The cry comes again, a wild piercing wail, the sound of her soul tearing in half. I put down my book, put my hand to my chest, and let it move
through me. In a minute, I will stand up and go to her.

In a minute.

In between, I let it swell in me, the freshened sorrow that her grief brings. My husband is not dead, just in love with somebody else, but I’m mourning him all the same, and my heart joins in Roberta’s howl, as if we’re a pair of coyotes. My wrist, out of the cast now for a couple of weeks, starts throbbing, and I put my other hand around it protectively.

Roberta.
I put on my shoes and coat and hurry over to her house.

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