Authors: Katharine Kerr
She pushed him away and got to her feet. "Not tonight, Ned.
The dance figure isn't working. I've got to find something else
to balance and comment on the blue flow."
His face closed in. It was a minute before he found his usual
smile. "Ah, you did warn me. Elena."
He came back in the kitchen and watched Jenny as she stood
washing the dishes. After a minute, he pulled her away from the
sink. "If your mother won't, you'll do."
The pool was bright and silver in the moonlight. Jenny
grabbed a handful of grass, tore off the old dress which was the
first that had come to her hand, plunged into the chill clean water
and scrubbed at herself, trying to scrub away the smell of the
Man.
The water went very cold; it numbed her and seemed to push
away the bad thing that had happened. When she was shivering
so hard she couldn't stand up, she crawled out, wrapped the
dress around her and lay beside Grandma Mossy, sobbing out her
fear and outrage. "If I tell, he'll kill us both like he kills the
squirrels and things. He said it. He said it lots of times. He's go-
118 Jo Clayton
ing to do it again. He said I was pretty and sweet and soft. He
said he knew I wanted it. He said I wasn't like my mother. He's
going to do it again."
The goatboy came and patted her shoulder, then played her a
song on his pipes that started soft and ended fierce. She heard
the promise in it and lay still.
Cold touched the back of her neck. It was the white doe, nuz-
zling her. Beyond her, on the far side of the pond, the homed
man stood. He lifted his head. opened his mouth, and cried out
without sound at all, yet Jenny heard the terrible wild sound of
it. Then he went away.
Aunt Piney rustled. The sound comforted her, it was so homey
and ordinary. Clutching the dress around her shoulders, she got
to her feet, looked down into Grandma Mossy's deep dark eyes.
and drew a long breath. She didn't say anything more, just put
on the dress and started home through the forest, her hand on the
shoulder of the white doe.
The Man went hunting in the morning and he didn't come
home that night. He never came back.
At the end of the summer when Jenny was twelve, she came
sad and angry into the Forest. She spread out a dishtowel on the
grass and set out the picnic she'd made for herself. Grave and si-
lent, she broke off bits of sandwich and laid them on Aunt Pi-
ney's roots and in front of Grandma Mossy, then she poured a
dollop of lemonade on the bits, gave another to the pool, the rit-
ual she'd followed through the years though she no longer really
believed in it.
She poured lemonade into the thermos top, sipped at it, then
sat holding the cool silver cup in her hands. "I'm going away,"
she said- "Mother says I have to. I'm supposed to live with my
father back east and go to school there. She says I should go on
with my clay stuff and I can't do that here. I think she's just tired
of having me around, not that she really notices me much. Jake
says I can learn by myself, but she tells him to shut up, he just
fools with words, he doesn't know what he's talking about when
it comes to working with his hands. Well, that's true. He can't
sharpen a pencil without nearly cutting his finger off. But he's a
good guy. He teaches me things and doesn't fuss. I don't even
know my father. I'm afraid he won't like me."
The afternoon was hot and dry and very still. Once or twice
she heard a snatch of birdsong and the bark of a fox, but they
THE PRISM OF MEMORY 119
were far off and very faint. The boulder was only an old rock
with patches of drying moss, the pine tree was only an ordinary
tree, the pool had dust on the surface and a spiral of tiny black
bugs buzzing around it She finished her sandwiches, drank the
last of the lemonade, cleaned up after herself, and went away.
When Jenny was thirty-two, Jake hired a private detective to
find her, then paid her way so she could come back for her moth-
er's funeral. Twenty years since she'd seen the house, twenty
years since she'd heard a word from her mother. She'd heard
about her, at least after she walked out of her father's life, seen
her on TV, read about her in magazines and newspapers, but
never heard a word from her.
Hard years.
Stupid years.
Coming back here showed her just how stupid they were, all
the days she'd wasted looking for ... something.'...
She stopped thinking. It was one thing she was really good at,
not thinking.
Jake had almost vanished behind bushy white whiskers and
eyebrows fibrous as dead lichen. His eyes were red with grief,
but when he looked at her, they turned cold. After the funeral
and the session with the lawyer, he drove her to the house and
took her inside. She didn't want to go into her mother's studio,
but he took her by the arm and walked her there- "Your mother
wanted this," he said- "I would've let you go to hell your own
way."
There was dust on everything which told her more than any-
thing else how long a time her mother had spent dying- "It was
her sent me away."
He walked to a comer of the room to the slotted case where
her mother kept her drawing portfolios, counted along the slots,
and drew out a shabby black folder. "Because your father threat-
ened to haul the both of you to court and get her declared unfit;
Acre was me and the other men and what happened the time Ned
disappeared, she knew how fighting it would turn out." He fished
m the slot, drew out a sealed envelope, brought both across the
room and set them on the palette table. "She wrote to you every
day the first year. Not a word from you. Then she said 'if she
wants to talk to me, she knows where I am.' You know her, she
put the hurt away and went on with her work."
"I never got any of those letters."
120 }o Clayton
"Ah." He brushed at his eyes, turned away. "Even so," he
said, not looking at her. "Even so, you should have written at
least once."
"I did. I took the letters down and gave them to the clerk to
mail; that's what you did in that piace. I took them myself. I
didn't trust him. He must have paid off the clerk. He wouldn't let
me go out by myself, he said the streets were too dangerous."
She sighed. "In a way he was right. When I left...." She picked
up the letter, looked at it, saw the blob of red wax and impres-
sion from the goatboy seal she'd made her last summer here. She
set it down as if it burned her fingers-
"You should have come back here."
"Yeah. Well."
Jake had scrubbed down her mother's room, got it ready for
her. He was staying in town these days. Shrugged when he told
her. Said it just seemed the best thing to do.
Because she couldn't deal with the stench of sickness that lin-
gered in that room. she cleaned out her own and lay staring at
the stains on the ceiling whose patterns she'd never forgot. Same
old bed, grown too short for her now. Smells of ancient turpen-
tine and oils. Her mother was a practical woman in unexpected
ways and had used this room to store paint cans and old easels.
It was like trying to sleep in the middle of ghosts.
The light from the full moon came in through curtains held to-
gether by cobwebs and dust; it fell across the bed, across her
face. Her mind went round and round. Round and round like a
squirrel in a wheel. Round and round and getting nowhere.
She left the bed and wandered about the house. It seemed
smaller than she remembered. The long narrow kitchen was full
of light now and dancing shadows as the wind fluttered the
leaves on vines that had grown across several of the windows.
She opened the door to the studio and looked in, decided she
didn't want to go in there and wandered into the small living
room with the fireplace that took up half a wall. Her room was
on the other side of that fireplace. Winter nights she pushed her
bed against its backside and snuggled against the warm bricks-
She only had the one black dress she'd worn for the funeral.
so she went into her mother's room, opened the closet, and
pulled out what came to hand, a pair of ancient twill slacks, one
knee torn, smears of dried paint stiffening the folds, an even
older sweater and a pair of boots worn so limp she didn't know
if she could get her feet in mem. She threw me clothes on the
THE PRISM OF MEMORY 121
bed and it was like standing by her mother's coffin, looking
down at her before they closed the lid and sent her to the fires.
seeing the strong bones that were always there though never
quite so stark as now with the masking flesh gone from between
bone and skin.
She remembered her mother as a big woman, with broad
shoulders, heavy hips and big strong hands that were always
gentle and always smelling of oil and turpentine. Usually a
bruise on a thumbnail where she hit it with the hammer when she
was building one of her stretchers. Pencil smudges on her finger-
tips and along the resting side of the hand. And charcoal
smudges everywhere.
She pulled the sweater over her head. The shoulders were all
right, but the arms were too long and the body hung in bunches
about her narrower torso. On her way out she passed through the
kitchen to collect the bottle of wine she'd seen in the refrigerator.
She found an unbroken wineglass, rinsed it out, and dried it with
a forgotten dishtowel drawn through the towel loop beside the
sink.
The pool glimmered like molten silver. She'd tried so often for
that particular effect in her glazes, never remembering where
she'd first seen it. "Easy for you," she said, and laughed until
she heard a too familiar edge to the sound and broke it off.
The old boulder was smaller than she remembered, but the
eyes and the smile were still there. The pine tree had got taller
and scragglier, but the rustle of its needles was as welcoming as
ever.
Creakier in the joints now than she'd been as a child, she
bowed to them both, gave them a libation from me wine bottle,
and added a dollop for the pond, the small ritual bringing back
a flood of memory. Wishing she'd brought a blanket as the chill
rose into her bones, she settled on the dew-damp grass and
poured herself half a glass of the wine. Before she drank, she
lifted it to the moon floating overhead through shreds of cloud.
"To dreams and madness."
She emptied the glass, set it beside her. "I wasn't a drunk, in
case you think that's what this is about. It wasn't cool, being a
drunk. You know, I must have damn good genes. I'm still alive.
Maybe broke. Maybe thirty years wasted. Maybe the guy I
thought loved me kicked me out when I started getting straight.
That's a hoot, isn't it. I^ong as I was a mess, he adored me. But
I'm still alive."
122 Jo Clayton
Legs drawn up. arms crossed (MI her knees, she sat gazing into
the mirrored water, watching me face of the full moon glide
slowly across it, remembering her mother.
Remembering how desperately she'd loved her. How much
she'd wanted her approval. How sad she'd been when her moth-
er's absorption in her painting took her so far away in mind, if
not in body.
She thought about the portfolio of sketches Jake had given her.
Hundreds of them, some of them finished drawings in me min-
imal style of her mother's early period, achingly lovely, simple
lines, some of mem quick studies that were barely more than
scrawls on scraps of paper. All of them her. As a baby, a toddler,
a young girl. Her. Yet she'd never posed for her mother, not
once. And the ones that touched her most deeply were me messy,
labored sketches from her mother's last days, attempts me dying
woman had made at extrapolating the adult from the child.
She cried a little, more for herself than her mother. And for all
the wasted years. The stupid years.
"Maybe Jake was right," she said. "Maybe I should have
come home long ago. Maybe a lot of dross would've been
cleared away. Maybe not. The mess I was...."
She leaned on the boulder, it was warm against her back like
bricks of the fireplace. "Grandma Mossy." She smiled. "Jake's
the writer," she said, her voice drowsy and dragging a little with
weariness. Above her, pine needles rustled a gentle reproof.
"Aunt Piney. Well, if you don't mind, why should I."
All her mother's money, more than she'd expected actually,
was in trust to the land. A lot of land. An old grant the lawyer
said. Your great-grandfather got firm title through Congress. I
wish I knew how. It's yours now, along with the income from the
trust. You nave to live in the house for five years, though, and if
you sell any land. the trust money stops immediately and the re-
mainder of the grant goes to the Nature Conservancy.
Through half-closed eyes she watched starlight glitter on the