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Authors: Mad Dash

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BOOK: Patricia Gaffney
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I think again of me at twenty-three, twenty-four. Out of college but not on any of the career tracks I thought I might be on by then. Hanging out with iffy guys, drinking too much in bars, taking too many dead-end jobs to pay the rent on my overpriced efficiency apartment. Confused. Thrilled with my independence, just
delighting
in being on my own, the whole world open and available if I could ever choose, ever commit—and then I fell in love with Andrew.

And that was the end, if you look at it like that, if you take that perspective. The end of all my choices. After that, everything, like it or not, fell into place. Dash’s life, settled.

“Greta.”

She smiles at me, hand on the door. “Dash. Thank you so—”

“I could use some help. I’m not in the office as often as I should be these days because of, you know, circumstances, so I’m thinking I could use a good, reliable assistant. It would be part-time, and mostly what you’d do is answer the phone and sound intelligent, but you’d also help me out on shoots like today, when it can get complicated. I think you did really well today—”

“Oh
wow.

“—especially considering the limited amount of experience you’ve had in portraiture—”

“Oh, this would be so
great.

“Now, you wouldn’t get rich, and we should probably try this out on a trial basis before either one of us commits—”

“Oh, golly, the answer’s yes. Trial basis, that’s fine, whatever you think. I’m up for it, I’m ready.” Her whole face beams in the yellow light of the streetlamp. “Even if it’s not that much, a steady income right now would be perfect for me. Oh, I’m excited!”

“Me, too. When do you think you could start?”

She throws her head back and laughs that crowing laugh, orange hair flying, beads clacking. “Tomorrow?”

She’s so funny. I have absolutely no reservations about this, even though it’s a spur-of-the-moment decision. “How about Monday? It’s a light day for work but heavy for phone calls, people calling for appointments because they made up their minds over the weekend. I’ll come in Monday and we’ll go over everything, how’s that?”

“Monday, perfect. I can’t wait to tell Joel.” She hugs herself. “I am the
luckiest
person.” Suddenly she collapses, shoulders hunched, head bowed. “God, I’m being so unprofessional. Thank you, Dash, I accept your job offer.” She dissolves in giggles.

This is going to be so much fun. It’s like I’ve hired myself.

 

three

D
riving back to the cabin at night doesn’t scare me, although if something happened, no one would know. No one’s worrying about me. I guess I miss that. It was a comfort, a pillow between me and danger, that someone (Andrew) was worried about me. Then I didn’t have to worry about myself.

I put music on to break the silence. I make a cup of tea. There’s a message on the machine from Andrew saying that he’s going to bed early, he’s got another headache, but we need to talk.

The puppy smiles at me as she sits on her little haunches on the hooked rug by the woodstove. She has the biggest brown eyes. “Hi, sleepy,” I say in a cooing voice. “You were so
good
today. Weren’t you? Yes, you w——Hey!” She might be smiling, but she’s not sitting on her haunches. She’s peeing.

We go outside.

I still can’t get over how quiet it is. No cars, airplanes, sirens, radios, children, televisions. Another light, wet snow is starting to fall, just like last night. It’s unusual, everybody says, snow down here this early; it’s not even officially winter yet. I lift my face to the pearl-bright sky and let snowflakes tickle my eyelids. When I take a deep breath, it smells like innocence.

When I was a little girl, my mother taught me how to make snow cream: Fill a pot with clean, fresh-fallen snow, add milk, a lot of sugar, some vanilla, stir it up. Give half to your mother and eat the rest right out of the pot. Makes your head throb and your teeth ache.

Just thinking about it makes me crave some snow cream now. I’ve been thinking, part of the reason I could do such an unspeakable thing as walk out on Andrew, actually
leave my home
, is because I’m an orphan. My mother and I carried home between us, even though we didn’t live together for the last twenty-five years. She tied me to my past—she was the history of me. My mother was my home. Storming out of that other place, the brick town house in Adams Morgan that Andrew and I bought as soon as we could afford it, the house we loved and fought and built our lives and raised our daughter in—leaving that house seems almost like a technicality. Like checking out of an especially comfortable bed-and-breakfast.

That’s not true, what am I saying? But still—where you grow up, for better or worse, that’s home. When I dream, Mama’s old clapboard house in Greensboro is always the setting for
home
, even when I people it with anachronisms like Andrew and Chloe or my dentist. All the domestic dramas in my sleeping dreams unfold in that kitchen with the faux redbrick tile, the dog’s big wicker bed forever blocking the broom closet. Or in the beige-carpeted living room with the baby grand piano nobody could play—Daddy won it in a contest. Or in the deep window alcove at the top of the stairs where I kept my hamster cage and read movie-star magazines. Home.

The puppy can’t walk far; snow gets stuck between her toes and makes her limp. I pick her up. We’ll go to the end of the driveway, watch the cars go by. This is not much of a snow; the flakes are already growing fat and feathery. It’ll stop soon, but I wish it would last all night, snow and snow, keep snowing till the whole white world came to a halt. A nonviolent, temporary interruption of my life.

I have another snow memory, a sweet one that’s warmed my heart for two decades. If I get amnesia, if I get Alzheimer’s, if any physical misfortune befalls me except blindness, I won’t forget this one. It’s engraved inside my wedding band:
RUBBISH
.

 

A
ndrew and I had a traumatic courtship, defining courtship as the interval between meeting and sleeping together. He was twenty-eight, had just passed the D.C. bar exam, and was fighting with his father over what to do next: teach while he got his Ph.D. in history or join the family law firm. I had a degree in sociology (I asked Chloe if that’s still what you major in when you have no idea what you want to be; she said no, it’s communications now) and lots of dreams and ambitions, but except for dog walking and house-sitting, I was pretty much unemployed. At twenty-four, I was just beginning to worry about that.

I wasn’t free when we met. I was going out with, in a raggedy, undeclared way, one of the musicians in a garage band I was singing with. Practicing with, rather; we hadn’t had any gigs yet, never been hired to play anywhere for actual money. (I remember Andrew’s face when I told him the name of the band was Goon Squad—he’d imagined I sang in a chamber chorale or something, I realized later.) My boyfriend called himself Hood, but his real name was Larry Heigle. He had peroxide hair and a silver spike in his bottom lip, and this was
years
before body piercing went mainstream.

In the morning after the first time we made love, Andrew sat on the edge of my bed to pull his socks on and told me it was all a mistake.

“It’s not you, it’s me,” he said. And “I hope we can still be friends.”

I’d just woken up. I lay amid the tangled covers in dawning shock, still dazed from the most thrilling, most
complicated
lovemaking of my young life. “What? Say that again?” He did, and it felt as if I were being wrenched out of a good dream by a punch in the nose.

“I don’t think it’s going to work out,” he said sorrowfully. He was dressed in an early incarnation of the uniform, the winter version, khakis and a charcoal-gray crewneck over the blue Oxford shirt. One of the reasons I’d fallen for him was because he wasn’t like anyone I knew, not in those days. Compared to my friends, he was the exotic one, an earnest oak in a crowd of gaudy palm trees.

“What’s wrong? What’s going on?” When I grabbed for the sheet, I grabbed back all the inhibitions—not that I had so many, hardly any compared to Andrew—that I’d joyfully sloughed off during the long, amazing night. “Are you leaving? This is over?”

He stood up to buckle his belt. He poked around and finally found his wire rims amid the clutter on my bedside table. Then he faced me in military at-ease posture, hands behind his back, legs apart. Defenseless—taking it on the chin. Behind his glasses his eyes were the clear, bewildered blue that still melts me and, I really think, makes me a better person. Because I don’t want to be anything but kind to him.

“It’s just that we have nothing in common.” He puckered his serious brow. Just like now, only not as deeply, it furrowed in three places when he frowned. “You’re terrific, but I can’t see this going anywhere. So I think it’s better to break it off now instead of later.”

“But we’ve
always
known we have nothing in common. We
joked
about it.” In a flirty, indirect way, during the period when we were still pretending I was being faithful to Hood. Everything was bittersweet and forbidden then—how could we not fall in love? Twelve hours earlier we’d quit playing that game, though, or so I thought, and now Andrew was telling me it was over? I threw a pillow at him—I’d have thrown a bomb if I’d had one.
“What is wrong with you?”

He put his hands out in the baffled, hunch-shouldered gesture of earnestness that always gets me. “Dash,” he said gently. “Look.” The fact that he didn’t want to
hurt my feelings
made me so angry, and so horribly alive to what I was losing, I burst into tears. “Oh, please,” he mumbled, but out of distress, not impatience. “Please don’t do that.”

“Last night you liked everything about me,” I threw at him, wiping my face on the sheet. “About us. What a jerk you are. Go if you’re going, just go.” I couldn’t look at him, the way his bony wrists hung there, helpless-looking, under the cuffs of his shirt, the unfamiliar body I’d just seen and made terribly familiar, a feast covered up with a cloth before vanishing. Oh, he was so wrong, but I didn’t have the words to
explain
it to him.

“We’re different people, that’s all. No one’s to blame, we’re simply—”

“Are you
trying
to sound like the woman?”

“What?”

“Go away!”

He started to, his relief obvious.

“But don’t think you didn’t break my heart!”

That stopped him. “I’m so sorry. That’s the last thing I wanted.”

“What
do
you want? I don’t understand you. Just tell me.”

“I’ll send your records back.”

“You’ll
send
them?” I’d lent him some CDs, hoping to turn him on to punk rock. The pain and politeness and the badly disguised anguish in his face while he listened to them had wrenched me even deeper into helpless love. “You’ll
send
them?”

“I’ve thought about it all night,” he said—a patent lie; I’d heard him snoring. “Relationships are hard enough anyway and, em, I just believe two people need to have as much in common as possible before they…before they even start.”

“My parents had nothing in common.” I couldn’t believe I was
arguing
with him—how low could I go? But I thought of my mother and father, how different they were and how ecstatically happy together. I wanted that, but until then I’d never realized it, I think because my mother and I were everything to each other after Daddy died. Andrew—not that he was like my father, but he was the only man I’d ever met whom I could imagine
being
a father. Or a husband. He seemed ready-made.

And here he was turning me down. “You and I,” he said, “we’re like…” He squinted in thought; he’s always been horrible at analogies. “We’re like Nixon and James Brown. I just don’t think we’re right for each other.”

“What about opposites attract?”

“Attract, yes. Yes,” he agreed. “But then they repel.”

Repel.
The sting of that was scalding. “Didn’t you like fucking me?” I said on purpose. He
hates
it when I swear, so I don’t anymore, or hardly ever. But I did then, like a sailor, and I wanted to see him blanch.

“There, that’s—exactly it,” he said. “Don’t you see?” I saw, but then he rubbed it in: He made a gesture that took in everything I suddenly realized he hated about my room, the messiness, the—oh well, the chaos. It’s hard to keep a one-room efficiency apartment neat and tidy. I’d noticed his veiled incredulity the night before, and I’d imagined he was comparing my place with the spare, barrackslike apartment on Twenty-fifth Street
he
called home. I knew a symbol of incompatibility when I saw one, but I resented having it thrown in my face by
him.

“Okay, leave!” I shouted. “Leave right this instant!”

He slunk out.

All day, while I moped, it snowed. Late in the afternoon, Hood and the rest of the guys picked me up in the band’s ancient van, a noisy, foul-smelling, smoke-spewing rust heap they kept registered in Maryland because the inspection laws were looser. We were going out to College Park to practice with another band, maybe hook up with them and start playing country rock, since our punk careers weren’t going anywhere.

I’d spent the day watching snow swirl past the window, comforted a little by its erasing power, able occasionally to imagine not feeling wretched but cleansed and free, the way I used to feel. Like,
yesterday.
I was young, and I was also young for my age, but the hurt was real and I knew what I’d lost. Numb as a widow, I stayed all day at the window and watched the snow, trying to make sense of this massive personal catastrophe, this violation of my deepest instincts. I loved Andrew. I did, and it wasn’t infatuation or lust, although it certainly was those, too. I’d met my match, my man, and I knew it, and he’d said, “We don’t suit,” and walked away. The
injustice.

I took my seat in the back of the stinky van, wedged between an amplifier and Hood, who kept trying to cheer me up—last night had meant absolutely nothing to him, which somehow made it even more distressing to me. “Hey, whatever,” he said while he patted my knee, “it’s not like this big, like,
love
affair, right? Right? Guy’s an asshole, you’ll—” I looked away, out the window, and there was Andrew waving to me from the snowy sidewalk.

Just then Eddie, the drummer, started the van and it roared into rattling, hacking life, belching plumes of foul blue smoke. Andrew started shouting and windmilling his arms. Hood turned to see what I was staring at. “What the fuck?” he said. Eddie said the same thing, “What the fuck?” but he was talking about the van. It wouldn’t move, even when he tromped on the accelerator.

“Who’s that guy?” wondered Greg, the guitarist, before his attention joined Eddie’s on the mystery of the motionless van. I sat still, imagining hopeful things one second, hopeless ones—Andrew had decided to
bring
my CDs back rather than send them—the next. His mouth kept forming the same phrase, but I couldn’t make it out over the engine roar. He flapped his hands; he grabbed his neck, made a slashing gesture across his throat. He wanted to kill himself? The last snowplow had left a high, filthy bank of snow between us and the curb; Andrew couldn’t get closer to the van without going around to the other side, but rush-hour cars and the slick street made that a potentially suicidal idea.

“Are we stuck on the ice?” Greg said.

“What’s he doing?” Hood asked, looking out the window at Andrew.

Hatless in a camel chesterfield coat, he seemed to be walking around in circles on the steep slope in front of my apartment building. Not walking, more like shuffling, pushing snow aside with his loafers, and every few seconds he’d take a giant step to the side and start shuffling again.

BOOK: Patricia Gaffney
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