The Stager: A Novel (2 page)

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Authors: Susan Coll

BOOK: The Stager: A Novel
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“It looks like you have some hungry mice!” she says.

“No, that was probably Dominique. He likes to chew on things. I mean he
liked
to chew on things.”

Now she looks worried, like she’s waiting for me to cry.

Poor Dominique. I hope he’s found someplace warm to stay. It’s starting to get dark outside, plus it’s colder than it’s supposed to be in April, and I
think
about crying, but I don’t. Maybe I’m less upset than I should be about him being gone. Dominique was an unhappy rabbit who never seemed to like me very much. He bit whenever I tried to pet him. He didn’t seem to like our house. He gnawed on the legs and gashed the fabric of an antique velvet chair that was some sort of family heirloom. We found him hanging from the living-room curtains like a monkey—he must have leaped up and gotten his claw stuck in the lace, which he shredded in the process. He bit my parents and they took him to a doctor, who said he didn’t like being cooped up in our house. Then my mom bought a cage, but I let him out whenever they weren’t home. Instead of being grateful, though, he just destroyed more things—like, last week, he’d eaten a hole in the living-room carpet and thrown up bits of white wool, which was weird, because rabbits aren’t supposed to be able to vomit. Before my mom left for London, she’d asked me if I was trying to make it so that no one would want to buy our house, which hadn’t occurred to me at the time, but was not a bad idea.

The lady finds the box with all the toy food in it and dumps it on the floor. She then sifts through the enormous heap of stuff, stopping to study the sushi platter and the hamburger buns and each little cereal box like these are the most amazing things she’s ever seen. She gets all excited about the chicken-noodle soup, for some reason, and then she digs around until she finds the tiny can opener. She’s really into this, the way she clamps the blade onto the side of the can and turns the handle and pretend-pours it into a small plastic bowl. Then she takes a spoon and blows on the invisible soup and feeds it to Kaya, who is wearing the same blue-and-white polka-dot bikini I’d changed her into a year ago. I prop Molly back up in her chair so she can eat some soup, too. She’s wearing a tie-dye one-piece under a sarong. Her hair is in two braids, one of which is caught in the strap of her bathing suit. As I fuss with her, I stir up so much dust I’m embarrassed. People clean my room once a week, but my mom told them never to touch the dolls. That’s because the cleaning lady who used to work here before we got a new cleaning lady once dusted Molly’s horse and his saddle fell off. When she tried to fix it, a stirrup broke, and then the cleaning lady had to leave the country. I’d asked my mom if she had to leave because of the broken stirrup, but all she said was “Don’t be silly, Elsa!”

*   *   *

WE’VE ONLY BEEN
playing for about ten minutes when the lady looks at her watch and says, “Oh my! It’s later than I realized, and your nanny said you had homework to do. Plus I need to get home to walk my dog.”

I don’t understand who this lady is or why she’s here, playing with me. I’m not even sure if I like her, but I don’t want her to leave. “I don’t have that much homework,” I lie, “and anyway Nabila is not my nanny. She’s my friend, plus she does my laundry and drives me to school and stuff. But … wait, who are
you
?”

“I told you when we were downstairs, remember? I’m the Stager. I work for Amanda.”

Amanda is the Realtor. She is helping us sell our house so we can move to London. She always dresses perfectly. Her business card says
Amanda Hoffstead Always Cinches the Deal!
We are all afraid of Amanda, but my mother says that her being intimidating is possibly a good thing: maybe people will be frightened into buying our house this time around. A different lady already tried to sell our house, but no one wanted to buy it, so after three months, when her
exclusive
was up, we had to
relist.

“I know you are the Stager, but what are you actually
doing
?”

“I’m just fixing up your house to get it ready to go on sale, to make it so other people can imagine themselves living here. Nothing too major. Your room is fine, really—it’s actually perfect, the best room in the house—so all we need to do is tidy it up a bit, put the dolls away for starters.”

“Well, if that’s all you’re going to do, then it sounds like you’re just a cleaning lady.”

“Touché.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means you have a good point. But I’m meant to do a little more than put things away. It’s actually a creative job.”

“It is?”

“Well, it’s more creative than you might think. I’m kind of new at this; I’m just doing it on the side. I’m really an artist. Well, I
was
an artist, before I became a journalist. Now I’m … Well, I don’t even know what I am anymore. An unemployed journalist, I suppose.”

“No way! My mom used to be a journalist! She wrote about money. But now she makes money. Or helps other people make money. Or helps people behave when they make money. That’s why we have to move to London.”

I don’t want to move to London, but no one seems to care. Everyone keeps saying how exciting it is, and that soon I’ll be speaking with a British accent. And drinking tea and eating scones. I’m really tired of the whole London thing and we haven’t even moved yet.

“Well, I’m not exactly a journalist anymore, either. I was running a magazine until a few months ago.”

“Oh. Like
People
?”

“No. It was a shelter magazine.”

“A
what
?”

“A magazine about homes.”

“I didn’t know there were magazines about homes.”

“Not so many anymore, which is why I’m sitting on the floor playing with dolls!”

“So what else are you going to do with my house?”

“There are lots of little things I need to do. And I have to work very quickly, since your open house is on Sunday.”

“But it’s only Tuesday.”

“Yes, but there’s a lot to do.”

“Like what?”

“Oh, nothing too radical, just a bunch of little stager tricks. Mostly just depersonalizing. People want to imagine their own families living here, and it’s hard when they see all of
your
things, like your toys or your pictures.”

“What are some of the ‘tricks’?”

Before the Stager can answer, we hear voices moving up the staircase, and then, all of a sudden, there are three people standing at my door. One of them is Amanda, the Realtor. She is in the middle of a sentence about the square footage of my bedroom, but then she sees me and the Stager sitting on the floor and she stops talking and says, “What are you doing, Eve?”

The Stager puts the little spoon down and says, “I’m helping the child clean up her room.”

Amanda says “Oh,” and then turns back to the people she is with, who are both very large. The man is wearing a blue suit but no tie, and the lady has on a dress with orange flowers. I can’t tell if the flowers are enormous or if they just look enormous because of the size of the lady. I also can’t tell if the man she is with is her husband or her father.

“We could paint, maybe knock out those bookshelves, change the carpet, and turn this into Toby’s room,” the man says.

“Or we could put Briana in here and keep the décor,” the lady replies.

“No, I think we’d need to paint, no matter who goes in here. These colors are pretty hideous.”

It’s true; we decorated my room three years ago, back when I was in second grade and was really into pink and purple. But I would like these people to get out of my house. The idea of Toby or Briana living in my room, whoever they are, makes me want to scream.

“By the time you come back on Sunday, these colors will be gone. You’re getting a sneak peak,” says Amanda. “This is the first showing. It’s not technically listed yet. We’re cleaning and painting, so it will be spick-and-span by Sunday.”

No one has said anything to me about painting my room.

“Wasn’t this already on the market?” the lady asks. “I looked at a couple of other places in The Flanders and I’m pretty sure I noticed a sign out front, but, if my memory is correct, it was out of our range, so I hadn’t bothered to look.”

“Do you smell something funny?” the man asks, making a sniffing noise. He looks at the lady, who is his daughter or wife, but she doesn’t say anything. Then he sniffs again, twice in a row, more conspicuously. Amanda walks over to my window and pulls it open. A gust of wind makes the lace curtains puff out, and we watch as they slowly settle back against the wall. Then the people come into my room and walk around, inspecting things, like we aren’t even there. The lady opens the closet and looks inside and pushes my clothes to the back of the rack. The man walks over to the window and stares out at the pool. Then he taps on the wall behind my bed and says something about its being “load-bearing.” They all go into the bathroom at the same time, and I hear the cabinets being opened and closed and the sound of the water running. Then they come back out and stand in my room again.

“We’re giving this a little TLC and a fresh start,” Amanda says. “The market has been pretty volatile, and the last Realtor priced it wrong, plus it needed a bit of sprucing up. But this neighborhood is dynamite, and things are getting better every day—as I’m sure you know, since you’re shopping. Home prices in this area rose by seven percent last year.”

“Really?” says the man, surprised. “What about that new development right behind here—that Unravelings place I keep hearing about? I thought it was in foreclosure, and bringing the whole neighborhood right down with it.”

“Unfurlings,” says the lady, who is maybe his wife.

“That’s an unfortunate situation, but it’s had no impact on values in this area, generally,” says Amanda. “It was a poorly conceived idea for some New Age baby-boomer living concept. Unwind, unfurl! Live like hippies, raise llamas, grow your own vegetables, listen to NPR, and live in three-million-dollar dream houses.”

Amanda laughs, but everyone else is silent, like maybe they don’t get why that’s funny. “They’ve organized the place like it’s a college campus, or a library, or some Marxist commune,” she continues. “Each according to his interests! They have fiction and nonfiction enclaves, a history enclave, music, visual arts, etc. Great idea, apart from the fact that no one can afford to live there. Or maybe it’s just that the people who can afford to aren’t the ones who want to live like hippies, if you get what I mean. The people with hedge-fund money want to live like hedge-funders!”

It’s not clear what the people think of this, or if they are even listening. The man knocks on the load-bearing wall again and says something about maybe knocking it down after doing some reinforcements. Amanda says that’s surely doable and a great idea. Then they turn around and walk back into the hallway. Amanda follows, and I hear them talking about replacing the carpet as they head up the next flight of stairs and into my parents’ room.

They don’t even say goodbye.

The Stager picks up the spoon again and blows on it before putting it to Molly’s mouth. “Have some yummy, yummy soup,” she says.

“They’re going to knock my wall down? And I didn’t know you were going to paint my room. I thought you said it was perfect!”

“It
is
perfect,” she says. “Amanda is crazy.”

“Well, then, what
are
you going to do? What are some of the tricks you were talking about?”

“Well, ‘tricks’ might not have been the best word, but you can do little things; like, once, I staged a house where there were a lot of holes in the wall, and I patched them up with toothpaste, then slapped on a coat of paint, and it was as good as new.”

“With toothpaste! That’s so funny! I hope not the kind with blue or red stripes in it! Why were there holes in the wall?”

“Lord knows. The woman was a little crazy. It almost looked like she’d been playing with a nail gun.”

“Really?
My God!
She might have hurt someone!”

“Well, no, I mean, I don’t think she was actually playing with a nail gun—that’s just what the wall looked like.”

“Oh, I see,” I say, although I’m not sure that I do. Now I am confused about the nail gun and whether the owner is crazy, or the Stager is crazy for saying that woman is crazy when she isn’t, and also if Amanda is crazy for saying that my room needs to be painted, or if the Stager is crazy for saying that it does not.

“Also, there are a couple of things that are sort of like tricks, like the Rule of Three.”

“What’s that?”

“Well, you know how things come in threes?”

“No.”

“Like the Three Little Pigs.”

“Oh! Or the Three Blind Mice?”

“Exactly. And there’s this stager trick that says you should always cluster things in groups of three. Like, on the counter, you should have three asymmetrical objects.”

I know the word “asymmetrical.” It means “uneven.” I’m in the advanced honors reading group. I’m the only one from fifth grade in with the sixth-graders. I get to walk across the tennis courts every day and go to the middle-school building for reading. “What kind of asymmetrical objects?”

“It depends on what room you’re staging. Say, in your front entranceway, you’ve got that pig, and that bowl of tulips, and that African statue. That’s a good cluster. The pig is very small, the tulips are medium height, plus the flowers splay out nicely, and then the statue offsets both of them, tall and thin.”

“The African statue?”

“You know, that tall wooden figure?”

“Oh, the naked starving person?”

“I guess.”

“I don’t know if she’s starving, actually. She might be pregnant.”

“I hadn’t really focused on that possibility,” the Stager says.

“But that’s already a cluster of three objects, so maybe we don’t need you to be the Stager.”

“True. But there are other rooms, and anyway, even though that’s a good cluster, it’s probably a little too specific to your family’s tastes. A little too … ethnic. Not everyone likes that.”

“But I love that pig.”

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