Welcome to the World, Baby Girl! (25 page)

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Hawaiian Good-bye

New York City
1975

Dena woke with tears running down her face. She wondered what that was all about. Then she remembered her dream, that same old dream that had popped up again. She would be on a merry-go-round and see a white house but lose sight of it as she went around, then it would come to her that her mother was dying and needed her. She would rush to the phone and try and get the number to call her but she would dial the wrong number over and over. Or the phone would not work. Then she would start to panic and wake up crying, lost and helpless. That was not a feeling she could understand. She was a person who was not lost or helpless. As a matter of fact, she was one of the most unhelpless, self-sufficient people she knew. Ask any man who had ever loved her. She did not want to depend on anybody for anything. She had always taken care of herself, didn’t want to need anybody, didn’t want anybody to need her. She had always been good at almost everything she tried; she was bright, and she was a fast learner.

But the one thing she was no good at was love and she knew it. Last week she had to tell J.C. that she couldn’t see him anymore, and it had been hard. She liked J.C. but he had turned out to be like all the rest. They always wanted too much from her, something she
could not give. She had told him over and over she would not marry him or ever live with him. But, typical of most men, they always believed she didn’t really mean what she said and would change her mind. She never did. Why did they always have to push her into a corner and get so upset? She didn’t want to live with anybody. She liked being alone. She hated anybody grabbing at her, trying to smother her. Her job was getting harder and harder, and J.C. had become more and more demanding.

She didn’t have the energy to fight him and fight for interviews at the same time, so she told him it was best that he find someone else, that it wasn’t fair to him to keep hoping. After she told him, he talked her into going out to dinner just one last time.

They were in a red booth at the Hawaii Kai restaurant on Broadway under a red and green lantern with red tassels. She sat and twirled a tiny paper umbrella while he lectured her on how she would never be happy until she made a serious commitment to another human being, and how he knew her better than she did herself—all the things people say. After two hours of this and several piña coladas, all she could think of to say was “Did you know that there are over four thousand little levers that control the lights at Radio City Music Hall? Not to mention the two hundred and six spotlights. And are you aware that the Rockettes are not all the same height, that it is an optical illusion?”

J.C. finally got the picture, and realized that Dena was a lost cause, and gave up. When he took her to her door for the last time, he hugged her good-bye and held her for a long time. It made Dena feel even worse; Dena did not like displays of emotion or affection. They always made her feel embarrassed and uncomfortable. Her mother had never really been affectionate with her, not like Dena had wanted, and she had always felt so awkward around her mother, all arms and legs, gangly and unattractive. Her mother was so cool, so isolated, so in control at all times. She had never seen her cry. She had never seen her laugh much, either. Her mother had been so beautiful, but there was something about her that was far away, removed, and even as a small child it had frightened Dena. As a little girl, she used to crawl in her mother’s lap and take her face and look into it
trying to see what was the matter. She would ask over and over. Her mother would look at her and smile and say, “Nothing, darling,” but Dena knew something was wrong.

She hugged her mother tightly. Her mother would laugh and say, “You’re going to choke Mother to death.” And afterward, when she was older, she tried to hug her mother, but when she was seven or eight she had stopped trying. It was awkward to hug her, to kiss her, it was a skill she never learned, and after a while it did not come naturally to either of them.

In her personal life, Dena did not like to get too close to people or have them get too close to her. She was much more at ease sitting across from someone than having to sit beside them on a sofa, much more comfortable speaking to a group of five thousand behind a podium than talking with one person alone. When someone tried to hang on her it made her feel claustrophobic.

When she went inside and closed the door, Dena made a promise to herself: never get involved again. It was too difficult.

Mommies and Daddies

New York City
1975

At her next session with Dr. Diggers, Dena figured she might as well ask her about it and at least get something for her money.

“Let me ask you something, Dr. Diggers. Is it normal for people to keep having the same dream all the time?”

Dr. Diggers thought:
This is the first real question Dena has asked.
“Yes. Why?”

“I was just wondering. I keep having the same stupid dream.”

“How long?”

“What?”

“How long have you been having this dream?”

“Oh, I don’t know. Since I was a child. I can’t remember. Anyhow, it’s always pretty much the same. I see this house and it has a merry-go-round in the front yard or sometimes in the backyard, but sometimes it’s
in
the house, and I want to go in but I can’t find the door.”

“Can you see yourself in the dream?”

“No, I just know that it’s me, but I don’t see myself. Anyhow, I just wonder what the stupid thing means. Or if it means anything.”

“I wonder if you wonder,” Dr. Diggers said.

Dena said, “What is that supposed to mean?”

“I think on some level you know you just don’t want to look at it. How did you feel about losing your father?”

Dena rolled her eyes. Here we go again. Ask a simple question and get some psychobabble questions back. “I’ve told you a hundred times, I didn’t feel anything. I never knew him; it didn’t affect me at all. Look, I’m not here to whine about my childhood.”

“I know, you just come here for the candy. Now, for the hundredth time, what was your mother like? How would you describe her?”

“Oh … I don’t know.”

“Try.”

“It’s just a stupid dream.”

“Was she a loving mother? Mean? What was your impression of her?”

Dena started to tap her foot, irritably. “I’ve told you … she was just a mother, two eyes, two ears. What was your mother like?”

“My interview. Do you think maybe you left something unsaid—before she died?”

Dena moaned. “Why does everything have to be so damn shrinky? I don’t think that you understand that a person can get on with her life without being analyzed to death. I’m not saying some people don’t need it, but I’m not one of them. I am not some weak, damaged, little person unable to function. I am just under a lot of pressure at work right now, and it has nothing to do with any deep-seated secrets locked away in my psyche, and you didn’t answer my question.”

“What question?”

“What was
your
mother like?”

“She had fourteen ears and twelve legs and was polka-dotted. You know, Dena, you are harder than a hickory nut to crack, but I will. You seem determined not to tell me one thing about yourself but I am not giving up. You can bat those big blue eyes at me all you want, I’m
not
giving up. You have finally met your match.”

Dena laughed. She liked Dr. Diggers in spite of herself. “Do any of you psychiatrists ever get shot?”

“Oh, yes, I have to frisk my patients all the time.”

Later, when she was leaving, Dr. Diggers went with her to the door. As Dena was putting on her coat she said, “By the way … I broke up with J.C.”

Dr. Diggers said, “Oh.”

“Yes. He was a nice guy. But he got too serious.”

As Dr. Diggers locked the door behind her, she almost wished she could call Gerry and tell him, but she couldn’t. Dena was her patient. Besides, she knew that he was better off not knowing that Dena had broken up with her boyfriend. It would be better for him to forget Dena. She could not hold out any hope there, at least not at the present time.

Diggers rolled into the kitchen, opened the oven, removed her dinner, and chewed thoughtfully while she ate. She had her doubts if Dena would ever be able to find a man she would allow herself to love. Right now, the girl was still looking for that daddy she never had. Oh, Lord, thought Elizabeth Diggers, daddies—aren’t they a dangerous lot? If you love them too much they can ruin you for life, or if you hate their guts, it can mess you up. And in Dena’s case, they can mess you up even when they were never there.

Letters Home

San Francisco, California
June 1943

Dear Folks,

I am wishing you were here to see this place. Everything is up and down hills, and they have tons of red streetcars and real Chinese people. It is so funny to see them for the first time, they really do look like their pictures. I am sort of confused about what the difference is between Chinese and Japanese. Never thought I would see either one in person, although I hope when I do meet the Japs in person I can make you proud. We have several guys here from Missouri and some from Kansas. One I had met at a Boy Scout Jamboree once so it is like old home week here. They finally gave me a uniform that fits. They are not used to the corn-fed type, I guess. A couple of the fellows are going to take pictures to send to their folks and I will get one and send it to you. I am sending you some postcard pictures of the Golden Gate and Chinatown. The ocean here is the biggest lake I have ever seen. Ha-ha. We went to a nightclub on top of a hotel and oh boy what a view and I mean the girls here as well, very, very pretty but hard to meet. Too many of us swarming around, I guess. We saw Red
Skelton and Esther Williams in person … very, very pretty … her, not him. All the guys in my outfit seem to be good guys except for my sergeant, but as he said to us he doesn’t like us one little bit either so it evens out, but I suspect he really is a pretty good old guy, though, and I wouldn’t mind having him with me when we do get into it for real.

I miss you and will write soon.

Your loving son,
P.F.C. Eugene Nordstrom

San Francisco, California
1943

Dear Folks,

Well, get ready for some big news. Mom, go sit down. Dad, get some smelling salts ready. Here is the big news. I have met the
one
!!! And I don’t mean maybe and am I in a tailspin. Boy hidy, are my spirits riding high. Have you recovered yet? I am sure you are wanting details so here is the skinny. Bemis, a buddy of mine, had a date with a girl named Faye and I tagged along to pick her up after work. She works at this big ritzy department store here. Bemis and I were standing outside waiting, having a few smokes, when I looked in the window and saw HER. WOW! She was standing behind the perfume counter and I was almost knocked off my rocker. What a beauty. Faye came out and when I asked her who that knockout was she said her name was Marion and that she was not married and did not have a steady, as far as she knew. Faye asked her if she would join us for a drink or something but she said no. Believe me, Mom, this was
not
a pickup. It took me three weeks just to get a date. This was ten
for sure. All the guys are razzing me … saying old wheat check is in love. She gave me a picture of her and all I do all night at the barracks is moon over her picture. All the guys are jealous, you bet. Mom say a prayer for me and keep your fingers crossed. Boy, am I lucky. I am the first soldier she has gone out with and with so many wolves in uniform roaming around this town, I wonder what she saw in me?

Your loving son,
P.F.C. Eugene Nordstrom

P.S. Mom, you will be getting some perfume in the mail from me but SHE picked it out.

San Francisco, California
1943

Dear Folks,

It is 2 am here in the Barracks and I am writing from the big pink cloud I am riding on. I am one happy boy. I know you may think this is fast, but I am no hayseed about this. She is the real goods, the whole shebang, the best there is, THE ONE for me, I know for sure, but here’s the deal. We don’t know when we are being shipped out and I am having to work fast and I need all the help I can get. She says she needs to know more about me and where I came from and all that. I have told her about the two of you and I know she will love you, you two are my ace in the hole. I have told her all about Elmwood Springs and Missouri and how great it is and how much she will love it, but, here’s where I need the help. Mom, I can’t blow my own horn without sounding like a braggart and I knew she would not like that. She has very high standards, so, Mom, if you could help me out I sure would appreciate it, the United States Army would appreciate it because I am not sure what kind of soldier I will make if I don’t get her. I am sending you her address. Could you write her and say how
happy you and Dad are that I have met her and that I have told you what a nice girl she is and how I never before had a girl that I loved like I do her and that I am a real nice person, from a real nice family and not just some wolf. Maybe you could mention how popular I was in high school and that I was captain of the basketball team and have my letters in baseball, football, and basketball—I think it might be funny if you sent her my report card, you could pretend it was a joke, but she is very smart and I think it might make a difference. Send the one from when I was a junior and made three A’s. Also any cute pictures of me when I was little. NOT THE BATHTUB ONE!!! You might want to say how proud you were when I became an Eagle Scout—no, scratch that—that’s too corny. She is a very sophisticated person and I don’t think that would impress her, and say that you are looking forward to meeting her. She does not have a family and I think this will mean a lot. I really need your help.

Regards, your loving son,
P.F.C. Eugene Nordstrom

P.S. Mom, would it be too much trouble to send her some of your cookies. Also tell her you liked the perfume a lot. She has elegant taste, don’t you think? One more thing, send a picture of you—any picture will do—so she can see what a beautiful mother I have. Please send this as fast as possible to

Miss Marion Chapman
c/o 1436 Grove Street
San Francisco, California

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