Read Mothers and Other Liars Online
Authors: Amy Bourret
Tags: #Psychological fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Foundlings, #Mothers and Daughters, #Family Life, #General, #Psychological, #Santa Fe (N.M.), #Young women, #Large Type Books, #Fiction
With John at her side, Ruby walks outside of the cool, dark court house and into the blaring sun. And a media maelstrom. The sidewalk is clogged with stiff-haired people, each reaching out a microphone as if straining to touch the sleeve of a matinee idol. Their too-white teeth gnash in their too-big mouths while they jostle one another for position. Behind them stands a circle of cameras, like stanchions fortifying their troops.
John motions her toward the shield of a broad stone column. He steps out onto the walkway and holds up his hands like a TV evangelist. “My client will not be making any statement at this time,” he says simply, confidently. Back behind the column, he takes her hand. “Ready?” As if she could ever be ready for this.
They step over a shin-high chain barrier and take quick, determined strides across the court house lawn, hand in hand, toward the side parking lot. Ruby’s instinct is to run, flee, but John’s hand steadies her. “Just keep looking forward, keep calm,” he says.
Two reporters leave the sidewalk in pursuit, as if in a race to see who mows her down first. A chubby man huffs up beside John, shirt-tails flapping and chinos sagging below his bouncing belly. On Ruby’s side, a blonde, coiffed hair bobbed at her chin, approaches with mincing steps, legs constrained by a tight scarlet suit. Stiletto-heeled Barbie shoes churn up divots in her wake. “Ms. Leander,” she calls, “what do you want to say to the parents of the child you stole?” The voice is barfly-rough, a surprise from such a perky, petite body. “Ruby, what do you have to say?”
Ruby just hums the daffy song and concentrates on John’s sure grip of her hand. He weaves her through the scattering of cars left at day’s end in the government lot toward an old white Land Cruiser, a spiderweb of cracked windshield sparkling in the sun. John yanks open the passenger door, helps Ruby inside. Before she can buckle her seat belt, he is climbing in the driver’s seat, tossing his briefcase in the back.
“Good thing I drove today.” The engine spurts to life. “I usually just walk over from my office, but I ran an errand before court.”
In the side mirror, Ruby watches the little red reporter pat her helmet hair in place. “Well,” she says, with fake cheer, “My grandmother always said life is an adventure or it is nothing at all.” Of course the old bird’s definition of adventure was trying a new hybrid of tomato plant.
John drives a circuitous route to Ruby’s house. He checks the rearview mirror, trying to spot any cars tailing them. Mrs. Levy transferred the house to Ruby through a trust, so it may take the media awhile to locate the address, but they will find it, in this world of computer search engines. Ruby grips the strap above the door as John takes corners as if he were drag racing. Nausea roils in her stomach, yet this is no morning sickness that will pass after a few saltines.
They are all there when John drops off Ruby at her house. The Ms, Chaz, Antoinette. And Clyde. The dog leaps off the front porch, barrels down the drive to greet her, almost knocks her on her can. He jumps up, puts his front paws on her shoulders, gives a quick lick to every inch of exposed skin, then races back up to the porch ahead of her, barking, “She is home, she is home.” When he reaches the porch, Clyde spins around on his heels and looks beyond Ruby. The confusion and disappointment register on his face; his other human is
not
home.
The Ms grab Ruby in a two-sided hug; Margaret pats Ruby’s cheek with pruney fingers—she hasn’t been away from the salon for long. Chaz elbows Margaret aside, jokes, “Hey, you’ve got your own girl.” He squeezes Ruby, lifts her until her feet dangle and the shoes she borrowed from Antoinette fall to the porch. He sets her back on her feet, gives her a loud, smacking kiss. His lips taste of beer and worry.
Ruby steps toward the door, then turns back. She can’t do it, can’t go inside that Larkless house. Chaz breaks her fall as she crumples to the porch, pulling him down with her. She lays her head in his lap as if she were a child. In the corner of the porch ceiling, Louie, Lark’s “pet” bat, hangs upside down, undisturbed by the commotion, sleeping until the prime hunting hours. She wonders if he misses Lark, too.
She doesn’t know how long she lies there. At some point the Ms and Antoinette leave, whispering good-byes and promises to call later. With Clyde whimpering beside them, Ruby stays there in Chaz’s lap. Her legs fall asleep. Her back muscles tighten into knots of wood. The bat takes off for his night’s adventures. And still she can’t bear to go inside.
Under the Calvin la-di-da bedding is a sanctuary. As if she were immersed in water, Ruby hears only her own breath and the occasional deep sigh from Clyde, sees only the shifting light across the plum-and-lilac splashes of the bedding. She breathes in, inhaling her daughter in every breath; she breathes out, Lark wafting across her face like bubbles in the water. Breathe in, breathe out, in, out. This is all Ruby can do, wants to do. In her plum-and-lilac water cave, she doesn’t have to think, doesn’t have to feel anything but the phone receiver she clutches in her hand.
She ignores the knock at the door, pulls the covers over her head; Lark’s covers. She has lain in this bed for three nights and days now, the sweet smells of her daughter growing fainter and fainter until now Ruby relies on memory more than nose, imagining her long body filling, spilling over, a Lark-sized dent in the mattress. She has vague memories of Chaz spooning against her, of voices—the Ms and Antoinette—swirling through the room. Mostly she just tries to remember that scent.
The whole time, Clyde has been beside her, head tucked between his front paws as if he were trying to blindfold himself to the fact of Lark’s absence. But even a blind dog would know Lark was gone; her absence is as palpable as Braille. “I know, boy,” Ruby whispers.
She groans at the tug of the sheets. “No.”
“Get up,” Margaret says. “Shower. Eat.”
Then Molly’s voice. “Come on, Clyde. You, too.”
Ruby allows Margaret to roll her off the bed, march her toward the bathroom. She winces at the screech of the shower faucet, more noise than she can stand. The scent of Lark’s kiwi shampoo that swirls in the steam wrenches her muscles as if wringing fluid from sodden cloth.
The hot water pelts her skin, each slender needle a stab to her senses. Rivers gush from the showerhead through her tangle of hair. Streams separate into rivulets that weave down her breasts, over her stomach. Just in the past week it seems, the life within her has decided to make a statement, the discreet bump morphing into a flashy bulge, as if the fetus were shouting, “Remember me?”
Little creeks run down the hill of her belly, her legs. When they reach the tub floor, the creeks merge back into rivers, converge in a swirl over the drain. And Ruby remembers.
The enormity of her situation weighs as heavily on her gut as her newly expanded belly weighs on her bladder. Lark is gone, but another life is depending on her. How will she support this other daughter from jail? Who will care for her? She doesn’t know how much, even if, she can count on Chaz. Willing her torpor to wash down her body, into the eddy of the drain, she steps from the shower.
The sounds of Margaret’s kitchen clatters accompany her as she towels off, and this time the noise hurts less. When she swipes the fog from the mirror, the gaunt face, the football player’s black stripes beneath her dull eyes shock her into an understanding. This, she thinks, is how Lark’s other mother must have felt in those days after her child disappeared with her car.
Shrouded in the weighty hotel robe Chaz gave her for her birthday, she walks into the kitchen. The window above the sink looks bereft; Margaret has put Lark’s avocado pit and the herb pots in the sink to soak away Ruby’s neglect. The table looks cheerier. A handful of wildflowers dance in the blue cream pitcher; Mrs. Levy’s good china glimmers on top of a much-washed twill place mat. The golden halves of a grilled cheese sandwich are parentheses around a bowl of creamy tomato soup; a tall glass of milk sweats beside the plate. Comfort food, and Ruby is ready, finally, to take comfort, in food and in the sliver of family that remains.
As Ruby sits, Molly returns with Clyde. His walk has not done him the good of her shower. He plods across the floor from the back porch to the front door, flops down, whimpers.
“He misses her,” Molly says.
Margaret nods. “We all do.”
The Ms communicate a coherent paragraph to each other in a look. They bracket Ruby like the sandwich brackets the soup, make idle conversation—salon gossip, the latest art gallery buzz. Ruby devours the sandwich, a bowl and a half of soup, two glasses of milk. It is a certifiable fact that a grilled cheese sandwich tastes better when someone else makes it for you, but this, this food is biblical.
She wipes her mouth with the cloth napkin, another remnant from Mrs. Levy, sets it beside her plate. “Lap-kin” Lark called it, which makes more sense given where it is used. This memory burns but doesn’t char.
Finally, she speaks. She tells them about the phone call the first night, Lark sobbing across the miles. They call her Tyler. They eat in the dining room. Her room is fancy, blue and white, what sounds like toile from her description. White carpet everywhere. She misses Clyde. She misses the Ms. She misses Ruby. She misses Home.
While Lark was talking, Ruby heard a voice in the background. “What is that? What are you doing?” Then a click, and silence. Still.
“They have to understand,” Molly says. “They can’t just cut you out of her life, pretend the last nine years didn’t happen.”
“They don’t have to understand anything,” Margaret says.
After the meal, the Ms leave Ruby with a stocked fridge and promises, threats really, to come get her if she doesn’t show up for work tomorrow. Clyde sighs his best doggy sigh, drags his chin down the hall and back into Lark’s bedroom. Ruby follows him and makes a halfhearted attempt to straighten the bedding. As she tucks the blanket under the mattress, her hand brushes something. She reaches a bit farther and pulls out a wadded plastic bag.
Ruby extracts a ball of bright green fabric from the bag and unfurls it with a shake. On the front of the T-shirt, the Girls Inc. logo stamped over the left breast. And on the back, a silk screen, text with a border of kid-drawn flowers and dogs and cats. “
I AM,
” it proclaims in Lark’s unmistakable purple print.
I AM
a bug-loving bookworm
a baseball fanatic
a tree-climbing poet
an old-movie addict
I like art and science
I like to dance and meander
I am a tomboy girl
I am Lark Leander
Ruby sits at the foot of the bed and hugs the shirt as the words Lark spoke when Ruby was outside the window blast through her head.
I don’t know who I
am.
This strange magnetic quality seems to have come upon Ruby overnight, as if the Sandman sprinkled her with charged metal filings instead of fairy dust. If she weren’t so uncomfortable, she might find it all funny, heads jerking toward her like a dance team doing a domino routine.
Ruby remembers the doorbell ringing several times during the days of fog, and Antoinette left a message to warn her that the local court stringer had picked up the story.
Santa Fe has a reputation of being a town out of touch with reality, out of touch with the world. People might rally around a hot topic like Israel or gay rights, but there is supposed to be an air of not caring, even disdain, for the everyday news. Unless that news is a sordid tale about one of their own.
When she walked into the coffee shop two doors down from the salon to get a cup of herbal tea, she first checked to see that nothing disgusting hung from her nose, that her pants were zipped. In the swirl of whispers, as intoxicating as the aroma of coffee it seemed, Ruby finally got it; she has joined the rarified ranks of celebrity.
Even here in the salon, her magnetic pull is inescapable. The salon is a homey place; Margaret wanted to steer clear of too-trendy austere and sleek, and, despite the kitschy name, from too-cute poodle pink as well. Instead, Molly painted the walls with columns and friezes in soothing tones of gold and amber and bronze. The space looks like a cozy corner of an Italian villa, where you would want to curl up, if not curl up and dye.
Today, however, Ruby feels anything but cozy. Eyes bore into her from the mirrors at the four hair stations and from above opened magazines in the waiting area. Tuesdays are always busy days. But today there is an extra hum in the air. And every woman needs to use the bathroom just beyond Ruby’s nail table at least once, walking slowly past her on the way to and fro. If she had a sense of humor at all today, she would make a joke about a contagious bladder infection spreading around like a summer cold.
Ruby’s own clients are more discreet. They talk about their weekends, complain about their husbands, but the obvious strain of not talking about Ruby’s plight is worse than answering questions would be. One client, who is getting only a haircut today, makes a point of stopping by the nail station, patting Ruby on the head. “I’m sorry to hear about your troubles,” she says. Ruby doesn’t like this, either. She doesn’t like the staring; doesn’t like the pretending that nothing is going on; doesn’t like the patronizing attempts at comfort. She wants her fifteen minutes to be over.
The fourth appointment is Beverly Sokol, a longtime client whose metabolism was obliterated by chemotherapy several years ago. Beverly has a great attitude; Ruby has never seen her down. She has no breasts. Her hair grew back gray and limp and uncontrollable, when she was hoping for springy red curls. She can’t control her weight. But, by God, she’s going to control something, if only a perfect ten of passion-pink acrylic nails.
Today Beverly sits in the client chair and promptly dissolves into tears. “I’m sorry,” she gasps between sobs. “It’s just so awful.” Ruby brings her a glass of water, puts a box of tissues on the table. Beverly cries through the soaking, cries through the application of acrylic fill with the paintbrush, through shaping the nails with an electric file. She cries all the tears that Ruby can’t shed.
Not until Ruby strokes polish on the first hand does Beverly drop the last wad of tissues in her lap. She puts her other hand flat on the table, sits up straight in her chair. “Oh, my.” Her voice is as soggy as the tissues. “It’s just…”
“I know,” Ruby says. “It is. But I finally have some good news. A hearing—for probable cause, it’s called—has been scheduled for next week, in Dallas. And the CPS worker has arranged for me to visit with Lark while I’m there.”
Knowing when she will see Lark has lifted such a black weight off her that Ruby wonders how she managed to stand upright with it in the first place. Like when a person has the flu. The first day she starts to feel better, she thinks,
Wow, I feel so much better
, and doesn’t realize how ill she still felt
that
day until she feels so much better yet the next day. Ruby will never recover from the virus of losing Lark, but at least the days are more bearable now.
Even so, by one thirty, Ruby’s head is pounding harder than her heart. The stench of hair spray and ammonia-based dye, the pulse of the New Age music Zara turns a decibel too loud, the glob of turkey sandwich caroming around in her stomach, all of it ends up in the space between her eyebrows and hairline.
She tidies up her station, sterilizes her tools, throws a load of towels in the washing machine in the back room.
“You’re an official tourist attraction.” Margaret leans against the counter, speaking between mouthfuls of her own late lunch.
“I’m so sorry,” Ruby says. “I know it’s a distraction.”
“No complaints from me.” Margaret snaps the lid on her plastic salad bowl, crams it back in the refrigerator. “We’re booked solid through next week.”