Read The Lives of Women Online
Authors: Christine Dwyer Hickey
âWell, Mrs Shillman, not everybody is the same, you know. Some of us like to make people happy, whereas others, it would seem, prefer to make them
un
happy.' Some day, she just might say that.
Â
She is arranging the cheese onto the bread when she sees, through the hall, her mother's shape on the porch window. Elaine puts down her knife and takes a step back.
Serena puts down the phone and opens the door.
âI won't come in, Mrs Greene,' her mother is saying, âI just wanted to say â you know the way Mrs Hanley is having the, you know, the thing tomorrow afternoon?'
âThe mother-and-daughter afternoon, do you mean?'
âYes, that. Now, I know I haven't had my turn yet, mine will be next week, but as I'll be extending my invitation tomorrow at Mrs Hanley's, I thought I should let you know that, well â and I hope
you don't mind â but I'm going to exclude the children from my invitation. You see, I'm not sure it's fair on Mrs Townsend â as she has no daughters. And if we start inviting all the boys too, well, goodness knows where that could end up.'
âOh, you're so right,' Serena said, âI really only wanted the girls to get to know one another, and they've certainly done that by now. But I totally agree with you. Absolutely, I do.'
On a rainy day, the women sit in the Hanleys' garden room and look at each other. Her mother says: âDid you cut those flowers from the garden, Mrs Hanley? They really are beautiful and so perfect for that vase.'
âThank you, and I really wish you'd call me Mary,' Mrs Hanley says. âNow, which will it be â tea or coffee?'
âTea would be lovely,' her mother says.
âWell. I'd like a drink actuallyâ¦' Mrs Shillman says, sounding as if she may already have had a few. âThat's if nobody objects?'
Mrs Hanley hesitates before saying, âOf course. Please, help yourself.'
Elaine's mother gives a wittery laugh.
Â
Serena and Patty are last to arrive. Serena brings a plate of homemade French biscuits shaped into hearts. They're called
palmiers
, she explains, and puts the plate on the table beside Mrs Hanley's Swiss roll and chocolate digestives. Mrs Shillman says, âAnd we
didn't bring a thing! Really, Serena, you're showing us up. I feel quite mean now, I really do.'
Serena says, âOh, I'm sorry. I thought everyone⦠I mean, it's just something that's done where I'm fromâ¦'
âSomething that's done! Now you're making us
all
feel mean.
And
bad-mannered at that.'
Mrs Shillman's eyes are glassed; her bottom lip is pouted.
Mrs Hanley admires the French biscuits. She takes some of them off the plate and places them beside her slices of sponge cake. Then she picks slices of cake up and puts them on Serena's plate alongside the remaining
palmiers
. She adds some chocolate digestives and then hands the plate to Elaine.
âAgatha,' she says, âwhy don't you take the girls into your room and have a chat? There's a jug of lemonade and glasses on a tray in the kitchen, if you wouldn't mind bringing it, Rachel?'
âYes, why don't you just all go and do that now!' Mrs Shillman says loudly with a large sweep of her arm.
Rachel turns and looks at her mother.
âAnd what are you looking at?' her mother says, the words sounding a little sticky in her mouth. âWhat the hell are you looking at now! Go on. Have a good look. Don't forgot, now, to take it all in. Do you want a pen and paper in case you'd like to make a few notes?'
Rachel's face goes up like a balloon. She turns away from her mother and goes through to Agatha's room. The girls follow in silence. They lie on the bed or on the floor and listen to music. The rain dribbles down the glass ceiling. They don't speak for ages until Agatha says, âHas anyone got a smoke?'
Patty stands up and goes around the room opening all the windows. She pulls a pouch out from the back pocket of her jeans. âI can do better than that,' she says.
Â
When Elaine comes back into the garden room, the women have already gone. The cups have been cleared, the plates taken away, the ashtrays emptied. The flowers Mrs Hanley cut from the garden are balls of coloured fire in the grey rainy light.
Â
9
Winter Present
December
I'M BACK IN MY
old room. The room of my childhood and teenage years. The room where I slept until I was sixteen years old. Every trace of me has been removed from this room: here there is nothing to suggest the least of my former existence. I know it's been a long time â but still, you'd think there'd be some little thing.
I imagine my mother bagging my life, resisting the temptation to sniff and poke, to open a copybook, read a letter, examine more closely that curl of hair hidden in the blue plastic pouch. In her rush to be rid of me, suppressing her very nature.
Did she give my things to charity, I wonder â what were my things then anyhow? A few clothes? Anything half-decent would have been put in the suitcase for New York. Apart from that winter coat that had cost her a packet a few weeks before I fell ill â by the
time I'd recovered, I was swimming in it. There had been talk of having it altered. It owed me, she'd said, another winter.
I imagine her, mourning the waste as she folded it like a shop assistant would fold it, edge to edge, before easing it into a black refuse sack. Bagging it all, bit by bit, week by week, so the neighbours wouldn't notice.
There was the box of books: those Mrs Hanley had given me, a few later additions bought with my pocket money. I'd been on a Steinbeck spree, as I recall; Steinbeck and Sartre.
Until Jonathan introduced me to the Russians. The elation of being singled out (he thinks I'm clever, like him!) followed by the immediate deflation (oh no, if he thinks I'm clever, he can't possibly fancy me).
I stayed up all night to finish one, just to have something to talk to him about the following day. A slow, dense wade through the words; tangled names I practised in the middle of the night: Raskolnikov, Razumikhin.
Crime and Punishment
, a title that would turn out to be somewhat significant.
What else? The cassette player I'd been given for Christmas â the last gift from my parents to me, although we weren't to know that then. And a few cassettes Karl had loaned me which I pretended to enjoy just to feel part of something. For much the same reason, the posters on the wall: rock stars I might yet learn to admire; political ideals I might grow to understand.
Always that bit behind; I wasn't sure of anything then â I was only starting out.
And of course the journals! Every thought in my stupid little head laid out in their pages. Now those she would have definitely
thrown on the fire. She may well have done the same with Mrs Hanley's books â flicking through the pages, finding those sentences I'd underlined â deciding on reflection that, after all, they had been a corrupting influence.
Lastly, the furniture â there would have been no reason to get rid of every stick of it, but I know that's exactly what she would have done. Did she saw it up like an axe murderer â the laundry basket lined in pink plastic? The dressing table and matching stool? What about the bed â how did she get rid of that?
Why
did she get rid of it at all? My old bed was far superior. My old bed was sturdy and large. A bed you could bounce on. The bedspread was candlewick. The curtains, a greenish gold. When you looked out the window you always saw something. When you lay on the bed you could hear things.
Now, a car comes into the cul-de-sac in the night and it's enough to jolt you awake. The clanking of the recycling truck terrifies the ear.
An alarm goes off two blocks away and it's like someone is screeching right into your brain. Mostly, though, there is silence. This has nothing to do with peace â in fact, it's the opposite.
I am used to New York noise, to being lulled to sleep every night by it and brought safely with it back into the morning. No matter what heartache or headache has been going on in my life, no matter which part of the city I've been living in, the white noise of New York has reached in and rocked me to sleep in its steel-plated
crib. It's been that way almost from the start â I say almost because for the first five or six weeks I had forgotten what it was like to sleep in a bed.
We were staying in a small midtown hotel then, while Serena searched for a permanent place for us to live.
Every night, she carefully bladed a sleeping pill: one half for me, the other for herself. I saved all mine in the zip compartment of a vanity case my mother had given me when I was ten years old â a reward for coming first in an essay competition called âSummer Sundays with my Family'. A five-page fabrication in bright blue ink, heaving with lies I came to almost believe.
I was so tired. In daylight, I would often pass out like a drunk â once when we were visiting a friend of Serena's in her swish uptown apartment, I dropped my coffee cup mid-sentence and slid off her sofa.
Another time, on the subway, in a graffiti-smothered car, I felt myself disappear into the wall as if I was just another one of the scribbles. When I came round I was slumped over a Chinese woman who was squawking like a chicken, while I clung on to her lap and had to be prised off by her husband.
âJet lag,' I heard Serena apologise, her voice sounding as if it was submerged under water. And then sharper, and definitely not submerged, Patty: âFor Christ's sake, Mom, how could it
still
be jet lag?'
Â
Serena and Patty slept with their heads hermetically sealed: eye masks and ear plugs, a helmet of orange-coloured sponge curlers
â so this was where their beautiful wavy hair had come from?
I would lie in the dark, listening to their breathing, and try to think of a way to escape on my own â I wouldn't need long, just enough time to find a private corner where I could take the stash of half-pills, lie down and quietly die.
That was my plan; my only plan then. After everything that had happened, I had no interest in staying on in the world.
In the morning, I would watch in a sleep-deprived daze as Serena and Patty did their exercises, lying on the floor, making scissors shapes in the air, courtesy of a contraption they carried in their luggage called a thigh-trimmer. I hated them then, their callous indifference, their ability to care about things like hair waves and trim thighs.
Sometimes, I was starving and gorged on food all day; other times, I could hardly lift the fork, never mind get it to go into my mouth.
I was forever biting my tongue and stubbing my toes; it was impossible for me to hold on to the shortest conversation. I heard Serena say: âI'm really worried about her. Do you think I should take her to a doctor? A therapist maybe?'
And I heard Patty reply, âOh, do what you like with her. I don't care, I really don't care!'
Â
And then one night I went into the bathroom, opened the window and listened. Below me, the sounds from the street. Horn honks and brake screams; cars twanging across man-hole covers; chimes from a nearby subway station. Behind all that, the slender whistles
of doormen calling taxis to hotels and apartment buildings. Sirens catcalled across the city. Ambulances gulped nervously at street corners and junctions. A whine from a long-forgotten burglar alarm. Things clattered and whooshed and churned and farted and pinged. Wheels forever turning in this factory of outdoor noise.
I took the cover and pillow from my bed, returned to the bathroom, lay on the floor and listened.
My eyes shut down, my senses eased off, my thoughts were smothered. Distinctive, discordant sounds, almost but never quite blending. And yet there was a sort of promise running through it too. The first time I would hear an orchestra tuning, I would think of that big city sound.
Â
And so I was sleeping again and, physically at least, could begin to recover. I had a dream one night that a swarm of large insects had invaded the city; I could hear their metallic wings stridulating outside on the street and, terrified, woke myself up. When I looked out the window it was a caravan of rattling supermarket trolleys as scores of homeless people pushed their few possessions around town, in search of a soup kitchen or night shelter.